Shelter Learniverse and Industry-Wide Calendar

Blog

  • Online Event – 10/5/21 – Open Arms Huddle Kickoff & An Informed Approach to Trauma – Maddie’s Fund

    Online Event – 10/5/21 – Open Arms Huddle Kickoff & An Informed Approach to Trauma – Maddie’s Fund

    Please join us for 11 info-packed meetings with time for your questions. Each Open Arms Challenge Zoom Huddle will consist of two 10-minute presentations from peers who have implemented that topic at their animal shelter or rescue organization, respectively, followed by a 20-minute Q&A.

    Huddle Speakers: Sloane Hawes, MSW and Nina Ekholm Fry

    About this huddle: Providing welcoming and inclusive practices in animal welfare can be achieved in many ways. This kickoff Huddle will provide an overview and engage in a discussion of how a trauma informed approach to your work can make a foundational impact.

    WEBSITE LINK:  https://maddiesfund-org.zoom.us/meeting/register/tZckduupqjsoGNGtPuk2fatmO_acogXGlPx7

  • Webinar – 11/11/21 – Focus on Tooth Resorption and Stomatitis – VDOS (fee applies)

    Webinar – 11/11/21 – Focus on Tooth Resorption and Stomatitis – VDOS (fee applies)

    Frustrated about resorbing roots and ankylosed teeth? What about refractory oral inflammation that cannot be controlled? We understand your frustration, but there is help! Let us show you how we do it!

    This VDOS webinar will focus on the two most frustrating dental and oral conditions in cats, namely tooth resorption and stomatitis. The potential causes of these conditions will be discussed. Tips and tricks how to extract resorbing teeth will be shared, and various treatment options (medical and surgical) for feline stomatitis will be reviewed. The didactic lecture will last 1.5 hours, but the webinar is designed so that there is extra time for interactive participation and answering your questions.

    WEBSITE LINK:  https://www.vdos.org/event-details/focus-on-tooth-resorption-and-stomatitis-8-00-pm-et-2

  • Webinar – 11/8/21 – Dental Nerve Blocks (Regional Analgesia) – VDOS (fee applies)

    Webinar – 11/8/21 – Dental Nerve Blocks (Regional Analgesia) – VDOS (fee applies)

    Feeling uncomfortable about sticking a needle through oral mucosa near a neurovascular bundle? Don’t worry, here you learn everything you need to know about nerve blocks for your dental and oral surgical patients!

    This VDOS webinar will review local and regional anesthesia/analgesia for dental and oral surgical procedures in dogs and cats. Suitable local anesthetics and needed equipment will be discussed. Techniques for commonly performed dental nerve blocks (including maxillary, infraorbital, major palatine, inferior alveolar, and middle mental) will be described step-by-step. The didactic lecture will last 1.5 hours, but the webinar is designed so that there is extra time for interactive participation and answering your questions.

    WEBSITE LINK:  https://www.vdos.org/event-details/dental-radiography-and-interpretation-8-00-pm-et-2

  • Webinar – 11/1/21 – Dental Radiography and Interpretation – VDOS (fee applies)

    Webinar – 11/1/21 – Dental Radiography and Interpretation – VDOS (fee applies)

    Is your dental x-ray machine unused because nobody knows what to do with it? Let us show you the profitability of dental radiography by demystifying the many shades of gray! See what is going on below the gum line!

    This VDOS webinar will review equipment/material needs to perform dental radiography in dogs and cats. Benefits and disadvantages of digital and non-digital options are outlined. Parallel and bisecting angle techniques and the most common positioning mistakes are discussed. Anatomy and pathology on numerous dental radiographs obtained from the upper and lower jaws with various lesions are explained in a systematic fashion. The didactic lecture will last 1.5 hours, but the webinar is designed so that there is extra time for interactive participation and answering your questions.

    WEBSITE LINK:  https://www.vdos.org/event-details/dental-radiography-and-interpretation-8-00-pm-et-2

  • We’re Looking for a Leader

    We’re Looking for a Leader

    Are you ready to add your expertise to a game-changing program for animals and the people that love them?

    In a historic move, the governor of California tapped the Koret Shelter Medicine Program to lead a five-year, 50 million dollar initiative not only to recover from the pandemic but also to realize California’s goal of becoming a truly humane state that does not euthanize healthy or treatable animals. Originally proposed in 2019 and put on pause by the pandemic, the California legislature voted to make it official with the 2021 state budget.  

    That’s where you come in! 

    We’re hiring a California State Director to lead the kind of large-scale change initiatives that have a huge impact and squeeze every ounce of opportunity out of this statewide pilot. More animals pass through shelters in California than in any other state in the nation; we’re hoping the innovations that allow us to get it right here will serve as an example for the rest of the United States.

    A little about the Koret Shelter Medicine Program 

    The KSMP was established in 2001 as the first university-based shelter medicine program in the world. For the last twenty years, we have developed and spread a welfare-oriented, community-centered approach to animal sheltering and services.

    Here’s some of what we’ve accomplished so far:

    • Our research has led to advancements in vaccine schedules and protocols that have protected millions of animals from life-threatening diseases. 
    • Our management model, Capacity for Care (C4C), has been peer-reviewed, published and proven to dramatically improve both the welfare and live outcomes of animals. C4C has enabled thousands of shelters to serve their community more efficiently and allowed staff to take pride and feel joy at work. 
    • Together with the University of Florida, we co-founded the world’s largest feline life-saving initiative, the Million Cat Challenge, and surpassed our goal of saving one million more cats a year early. Today, shelters enrolled in the Challenge have spared 3.5M cats and kittens from euthanasia. 
    • Many of those 3.5 million cats will have passed through a portal, a KSMP invention that retrofits feline housing and reduces stress and upper respiratory infections in hundreds of thousands of cats worldwide by providing the space they need to exhibit natural behaviors. 
    • Over six thousand animals have been sterilized by UC Davis fourth-year veterinary students completing a high volume spay and neuter rotation at our local animal shelter hosted by KSMP.

    There is an impression that our team is larger than it really is; in fact, the program you will be leading is small and scrappy. Our commitment comes from our shared belief that inside animal shelters are hard-working and innovative professionals that know what their community needs to move forward; our job is to give them the tools and help them shape the path to the humane outcomes they desire. In exchange, we discover and help magnify the successes being achieved by shelters across the nation. This virtuous cycle has enabled us to scale our efforts year after year and build the infrastructure that has prepared us to grow our program substantially and support California through our next transformative chapter. 

    If you’re ready to invest your time and talent into something that makes a positive impact, something that magnifies the good, something measurable, something that will inarguably improve the lives of pets and the people that love them, look no further.

    A brand-new position created for this once-in-a-lifetime opportunity. Is it yours?

    We’re looking for someone that loves building and scaling new programs. Someone intimately familiar with animal welfare and the sheltering culture is important for this role (extra bonus for the professional that already has an extensive network in California) but equally important is your experience managing teams, building engagement, will, and enthusiasm. We serve communities through animal shelters; communities are not made up of pets alone. The human-animal bond is central to everything we do. If you’re ready to invest your time and talent into something that makes a positive impact, something that magnifies the good, something measurable, something that will inarguably improve the lives of pets and the people that love them, look no further. 

    What would I be doing, specifically? 

    This position will provide strategic guidance to the team on unique challenges facing the sheltering community. A typical week leading this project would include building a statewide community among animal shelters; working closely with our deputy director to ensure different elements of this project are on track and planning our next grant opportunity; reviewing the progress of shelters we are working with and consulting with our other internal teams to see the full picture; and meeting with external partners to leverage every possible strategic investment in our goal. 

    As a manager of 2-3 staff, providing feedback and developmental opportunities as needed to recognize and/or improve performance and capacity will also be an important part of this role. You’ll also be part of our team expansion, so you would be leading the process of recruiting, interviewing, and onboarding additional members of the California for All Animals initiative. Of course there would likely also be typical university administration tasks, human resource duties, budget management tasks, and some oversight of the grants processes.

    A few of the EI/EQ qualities we think our new leader needs to succeed.

    We are looking for someone flexible but steady. Every personality type under the sun shines through the members of our team and those we serve. We are constantly changing and innovating, and you have to enjoy (or at least be okay with) that sort of thing to thrive on this team.  

    You must be passionate about the KSMP mission and helping communities of all shapes and sizes. The phrases “large-scale change,” “cohort building” and “community engagement” should turn your head in a conversation. If you’re not a disciplined self-starter, it would be nearly impossible to succeed in this role.

    As mentioned, we have big goals and a small, growing into a medium-sized team. To achieve our aims, we operate with excellence in mind in all matters, with the confidence to discuss and present ideas without ego interfering. We don’t always get it right, but we are committed on a cellular level to continuous improvement. You’ll need to have the kind of grit that wires you that way, too.  

    That doesn’t mean we’re a humorless bunch. Fun is important to us. We don’t goof off all day, but we fully encourage a light spirit that promotes healthy team culture, creativity, and imagination. In fact, it is an important part of our brand identity.

    We are part of a vibrant and expanding community

    The Koret Shelter Medicine Program (KSMP) is an education and research unit within the School of Veterinary Medicine at the University of California, Davis. The program supports the health and welfare of animals by applying the principles of shelter medicine to community animal management through shelters. Shelter Medicine defines a broad specialty that includes medicine, management, behavior, and the epidemiological study of community dynamics related to companion animal management. 

    Is this position speaking to you? Do you live in California or would you be open to the possibility? We’d love to hear from you!


    Click here to apply by October 20.

    Note: Davis is a great town, but you don’t have to move here as long as you reside in California. Please feel free to email sheltermedicine@ucdavis.edu if you have any questions.

  • Online Conference – 2/12/22 to 2/13/22 – 2nd Annual Fear Free Pet Behavior Symposium – SF SPCA (fee applies)

    Online Conference – 2/12/22 to 2/13/22 – 2nd Annual Fear Free Pet Behavior Symposium – SF SPCA (fee applies)

    We are thrilled to announce the second annual Fear Free Pet Behavior Symposium Hosted by the San Francisco SPCA. The virtual event will take place February 12 and 13, 2022.

    The best minds in veterinary and shelter medicine and animal care will come together to present the latest Fear Free strategies and practices demonstrated in veterinary clinics and shelters today with separate tracks designed for Veterinary Professionals and Shelter Personnel. A third track will focus on Pet Guardian audiences and will present how Fear Free practices can elevate animal interactions at home and in pet care environments. Shelter and Veterinary track sessions will be submitted for RACE approved CE.

    WEBSITE LINK:  https://www.sfspca.org/get-involved/events/fear-free-symposium-2022/

  • Online Conference – 12/7/21 to 12/9/21 – Looking Forward: The Future of Animal Welfare – The AAWA (fee applies)

    Online Conference – 12/7/21 to 12/9/21 – Looking Forward: The Future of Animal Welfare – The AAWA (fee applies)

    WHAT: A three-day virtual conference to wrap up the year and propel us into 2022… and beyond

    WHEN: Tuesday, December 7 – Thursday, December 9; starting at 1pm Eastern Time each day.

    FOR WHOM: Anyone in animal welfare who is interested in thinking boldly and strategically to plan and support long-term growth and mission success

    WHY: The content and the community. We’ll be looking at the future through various lenses, so three half-days will give us time to absorb these big topics:

    • Assessing the State of Diversity, Equity, & Inclusion in Animal Welfare: Where Do We Go From Here?
    • COVID’s Lasting Impact on Foster Care Recruitment & Retention
    • More Positive, Less Punitive: Finding Balance in Humane Law Enforcement
    • How to Serve Your Whole Community
    • Technology: Your Mission’s New BFF
    • The DC Cat Count: What the Kitties Can Tell Us About Population Management
    • The Future of Work, Post COVID-19: Capitalizing on a Decade of Uncertainty & Disruption

    Plus, we’ll serve up opportunities to connect with colleagues for juicy conversations on timely industry topics.

    WEBSITE LINK:  https://theaawa.org/event/future

  • Webinar – 9/29/21 – Cures4Cats Webinar Series – “Feline HCM and the Role of Nutrition” – EveryCat Health Foundation

    Webinar – 9/29/21 – Cures4Cats Webinar Series – “Feline HCM and the Role of Nutrition” – EveryCat Health Foundation

    Join EveryCat Health Foundation for the second webinar in the 2021 CURES4CATS HCM series, sponsored by Antech Diagnostics.

    Feline Hypertrophic cardiomyopathy (HCM) is the most common heart disease in cats. This presentation will review HCM, its prevalence, risk factors, signs, and breed predispositions. We will take an in-depth look at the role of nutrition as part of effective multimodal management of HCM, examining specific nutrients which aid in improving the quality of life for cats with HCM Effective treatment requires a multifaceted approach, of which therapeutic nutrition is an important component. We will take an in-depth look at foods formulated for cats with cardiovascular disease and the specific nutrients that may help manage hypertension, decrease fluid retention, maintain heart muscle function, and help slow the progression of concurrent disease processes. RACE approval is pending.

    Kara M. Burns, MS, MEd, LVT, VTS (Nutrition) is a licensed veterinary technician with a master’s degree in physiology and a master’s degree in counseling psychology. She began her career in human medicine working as an emergency psychologist and as a poison specialist dealing with human and animal poisonings.

    Kara is the Founder and Past President of the Academy of Veterinary Nutrition Technicians. She teaches nutrition courses around the world. Kara is an independent nutritional and well-being consultant, the Director of Veterinary Nurse Development for Wellhaven Pet Health, and is the Editor in Chief of Today’s Veterinary Nurse. She has authored many articles, textbooks, and textbook chapters and is an internationally invited speaker, focusing on topics of nutrition, leadership, and technician utilization.

    WEBSITE LINK:  https://register.gotowebinar.com/register/6754029867395372302

  • Two On-Demand Webinars to Watch Right Now

    Two On-Demand Webinars to Watch Right Now

    Ch-ch-change is in the air and it’s not just the weather! Thank you to the hundreds of you that were able to attend this pair of webinars live last month. We were so inspired by the conversations that took place during and directly after the shows, and we’re even more invigorated by the messages that have been rolling into our inbox in the weeks that have followed.

    Together we’re pushing ourselves to take a more critical look at the ideas, language and policies that leave us feeling like we’re spinning our wheels and, instead of feeling overwhelmed and defeated, we’re doing something about it! 

    Don’t get left out of the conversation: Watch this double feature and let us know how things are changing, or how you wish they could change, for the cats in your neck of the woods. We’re always here for a good cat chat.

    The Language That Harms Cats

    Monica Frenden-Tarant, HSUS Senior Analyst, Cat Protection & Policy, Danielle Bays, and MCC co-founder Dr. Julie Levy gave great tips on how to match our storytelling to our mission when it comes to cats (Hint: those abundant cat overpopulation pyramid infographics aren’t doing us any favors, so think twice before you share them—according to mathematicians and scientists, an unaltered cat might have around 95 kittens over 7 years, not 370,092!).

    Watch the recording and jump into Maddie’s Pet Forum for more Q&A.

    What Home Means for Cats: Working Together to Keep More Cats Alive and Thriving

    In this webinar, Maddie’s Director of Feline Lifesaving Monica Frenden-Tarant joins UC Davis Koret Shelter Medicine Program Director Dr. Kate Hurley to talk about how we can work together to get #allthecats back home, whether home is outdoors or in and whether that cat is friendly or not.

    • Get clarity on all the acronyms we use to talk about community cat programs—RTF, RTH, TNR, SNR—and hear why the only term we really need is Return to Home.
    • Plus, learn how to enlist your community to help keep more cats alive and thriving and why indiscriminate impoundment of cats is not only harmful to the cats, but to marginalized communities.

    Watch the recording and jump into Maddie’s Pet Forum for more Q&A.

  • Webinar – 10/27/21 – Doing What’s Right Even When it’s Hard: 7 Steps for Leading in an Ethical Manner – VETGirl (fee applies)

    Webinar – 10/27/21 – Doing What’s Right Even When it’s Hard: 7 Steps for Leading in an Ethical Manner – VETGirl (fee applies)

    In this VETgirl leadership webinar, Dr. Sally Ryan will review the ethics of working in a veterinary clinic, and how it can elicit emotional responses. In this webinar, we’ll identify some common ethical dilemmas in veterinary practice, whether you’re a CSR, vet tech, veterinary associate or veterinary owner. Learn critical principles for ethical leadership and identify ways for applying the principles in practice.

    This 2021 leadership track course is approved by the Certified Veterinary Practice Manager Board as applicable toward the continuing education requirement for the Certified Veterinary Practice Manager (CVPM) program offered by the Veterinary Hospital Managers Association (VHMA), CVPM Course Approval ID# 20-81.

    Not a VETgirl ELITE member? VETgirl ELITE members receive 100+ hours of RACE-approved, online veterinary CE/year ($249). That way, you know that you have flexibility to view any of our webinars (including small animallarge animalveterinary technicianleadershippractice management) and listen to our podcasts when you have time.

    All the webinars are recorded and can be viewed 24/7 after their release date for CE credit. If you’re watching the recording later on, don’t forget to take the CE quiz with it when you’re done to get your CE certificate!

    WEBSITE LINK:  https://vetgirlontherun.com/webinars/october-27-2021-doing-whats-right-even-when-its-hard-7-steps-for-leading-in-an-ethical-manner/