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Dec. 9, 2024

Agenda original pdf

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REGULAR MEETING of the ANIMAL ADVISORY COMMISSION December 9, 2024, 6 p.m. Austin City Hall, Room 1101 301 W. 2nd St Austin, Texas 78701 Some members of the Animal Advisory Commission may be participating by videoconference. The meeting may be viewed online at: http://www.austintexas.gov/page/watch-atxn-live Public comment will be allowed in-person or remotely via telephone. Speakers may only register to speak on an item once either in-person or remotely and will be allowed up to three minutes to provide their comments. Registration no later than noon the day before the meeting is required for remote participation by telephone. To register to speak remotely, contact Eric Anderson at eric.anderson@austintexas.gov or (512) 974-2562. CURRENT COMMISSIONERS: Ryan Clinton, Chair, Travis County Nancy Nemer, Parliamentarian, Travis County Lotta Smagula, D1 Beatriz Dulzaides, D2 Ann Linder, Vice Chair, D3 Dr. Paige Nilson, D4 Whitney Holt, D5 Luis Herrera, D6 Larry Tucker, D7 Sarah Huddleston, D9 Dr. Amanda Bruce, D10 Laura Hoke, Mayor CALL TO ORDER PUBLIC COMMUNICATION: GENERAL AGENDA The first 10 speakers signed up prior to the meeting being called to order will each be allowed a three-minute allotment to address their concerns regarding items not posted on the agenda. APPROVAL OF MINUTES 1. Approve the minutes of the Animal Advisory Commission Regular Meeting on October 14, 2024. STAFF BRIEFING 2. Staff briefing regarding monthly reports provided by the Animal Service Center. DISCUSSION ITEMS 3. FUTURE AGENDA ITEMS Discussion of the Animal Services strategic plan and planning process. ADJOURNMENT The City of Austin is committed to compliance with the American with Disabilities Act. Reasonable modifications and equal access to communications will be provided upon request. Meeting locations are planned with wheelchair access. If requiring Sign Language Interpreters or alternative formats, please give notice at least 2 days (48 hours) before the meeting date. Please contact Eric Anderson, Office of (512) 974-2562 or eric.anderson@austintexas.gov for additional information; TTY users route through Relay Texas at 711. For more information on the Animal Advisory Commission, please contact Eric Anderson at (512) 974-2562 or eric.anderson@austintexas.gov. the City Clerk at

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Item 1 - Oct 14 2024 Draft Minutes original pdf

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ANIMAL ADVISORY COMMISSION REGULAR MEETING MINUTES OCTOBER 14, 2024 The Animal Advisory Commission convened in a regular meeting on October 14, 2024, at 301 W. 2nd St in Austin, Texas. Chair Clinton called the Animal Advisory Commission Meeting to order at 6:00 p.m. Commissioners in Attendance: Ryan Clinton, Chair, Travis County Luis Herrera, D6 Whitney Holt, D5 Dr. Paige Nilson, D4 Lotta Smagula, D1 Larry Tucker, D7 Commissioners in Attendance Remotely: Ann Linder, Vice Chair, D3 Dr. Amanda Bruce, D10 Laura Hoke, Mayor’s Appointee Sarah Huddleston, D9 Commissioners Absent: Beatriz Dulzaides, D2 PUBLIC COMMUNICATION: GENERAL Rochelle Vickery – Spay & neuter event, community cats program Laura Nesmith – Behind the misunderstood work behind TNR Deborah Ro – TNR’s positive impact on our community Jacobi Alvarez – TNR needs Diane Odegaard – Glue trap ban and bats Pat Valls Trelles – Community Cats Program 1 2. APPROVAL OF MINUTES 1. Approve the minutes of the Animal Advisory Commission Regular Meeting on August 12, 2024. The motion to approve the minutes from the meeting of August 12, 2024, was approved on Commissioner Holt’s motion, Commissioner Smagula’s second on a 9-0 vote. Commissioner Nilson abstained. Commissioner Dulzaides was absent. Approve the minutes of the Animal Advisory Commission Regular Meeting on September 9, 2024. The motion to approve the minutes from the meeting of September 9, 2024, with the following correction was approved on Commissioner Nilson’s motion, Commissioner Holt’s second on a 10-0 vote. Commissioner Dulzaides was absent. The correction was to revise the action for Item 1 to read: “The motion to approve the minutes from the meeting of August 12, 2024, failed on Commissioner Smagula’s motion, Commissioner Holt’s second on a 6-0 vote. Commissioner Nilson abstained. Parliamentarian Nemer, Commissioners Bruce, Herrera, Hoke, and Tucker were absent. STAFF BRIEFING 3. Staff briefing regarding monthly reports provided by the Animal Service Center. The presentation was made by Don Bland, Chief Animal Services Officer, Austin Animal Services and Jason Garza, Deputy Chief Animal Services Officer, Austin Animal Services. A motion to take up Item 7 next was made by Commissioner Holt, seconded by Commissioner Herrera, and approved on a 10-0 vote. Commissioner Dulzaides was absent. DISCUSSION AND ACTION ITEMS 7. Approve a recommendation to Council to ban glue traps at City of Austin owned and/or managed facilities. A motion to approve the recommendation was made by Commissioner Holt and seconded by Commissioner Herrera. A motion …

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Item 2 - Austin Animal Center November 2024 Data Report original pdf

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Animal Services Office Statistical Report – November 2022-2024 November 2024 Intake November 2023 Intake November 2022 Intake November 2024 Adoptions November 2023 Adoptions November 2022 Adoptions November 2024 RTOs November 2023 RTOs November 2022 RTOs November 2024 Animals Euthanized November 2023 Animals Euthanized November 2022 Animals Euthanized November 2024 Total Live Release Rate November 2023 Total Live Release Rate November 2022 Total Live Release Rate November 2024 Animal Vaccinations November 2023 Animal Vaccinations November 2022 Animal Vaccinations October 2024 Spayed/Neuter at AAC November 2023 Spayed/Neutered at AAC November 2022 Spayed/Neutered at AAC November 2024 Animal Deaths at AAC/Foster November 2023 Animal Deaths at AAC/Foster November 2022 Animal Deaths at AAC/Foster November 2024 Animals Transferred: November 2023 Animals Transferred November 2022 Animals Transferred November 2024 Animal Lost, Stolen or Missing November 2023 Animals Lost, Stolen or Missing November 2022 Animals Lost, Stolen or Missing November 2024 SNR Program November 2023 SNR Program November 2022 SNR Program November 2024 Intact Animals Adopted/RTO November 2023 Intact Animals Adopted/RTO November 2022 Intact Animals Adopted/RTO

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Item 2 - Daily Inventory Report December 1 2024 original pdf

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Cat & Dog Inventory 12/1/2024 Total Inventory Kittens Cats Puppy Sm Dog Lrg Dog No Weig Total Sheltered Total 276 276 158 158 39 39 23 23 440 440 At AAC - Sheltered Only Kittens Cat Puppy Sm Dog Lrg Dog No Weig Total 937 937 58 1 11 9 5 53 395 2 5 5 6 1 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 1 17 15 274 1 0 3 3 0 3 2 0 1 0 1 1 1 120 384 121 386 27 15 53 0 0 0 0 1 1 0 0 0 179 0 0 179 10 0 11 48 3 1 7 1 1 3 6 0 1 66 0 67 16 10 3 0 0 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 8 0 8 1 0 0 1 1 0 9 0 0 0 0 0 0 11 0 11 97 91 31 12 319 551 Not at AAC - Sheltered Only Kitten Cat Puppy Sm Dog Lrg Dog Total Adopt Adopt-Rto Cactus Cat CK APD CK TCSO Quarantine Foster No Hold Partner Reclaim Snr Surgery Total At Vet In Foster TLAC Total Cat & Dog Intakes & Outcomes 11/30/2024 Intakes Abandoned Owner Surrender Public Assist Stray - ACO Stray - Citizen Total Outcomes ADOPTION Return to Owner TRANSFER Total Difference Kittens Cat Puppy Sm Dog Lrg Dog Others Total 1 0 0 0 1 0 2 1 5 1 2 4 5 18 0 1 0 0 0 2 3 5 0 0 5 0 0 0 0 0 1 1 5 1 0 6 0 0 0 0 1 1 2 6 1 2 9 0 4 0 2 1 1 8 1 0 0 1 0 0 1 0 1 0 2 17 2 2 21 Kittens Cat Sm Dog Lrg Dog Total Kittens Cats Puppies Sm Dog Lrg Dogs Total Total 2 5 -2 1 1 7

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Item 2 - Daily Inventory Report November 1 2024 original pdf

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Cat & Dog Inventory 11/1/2024 Total Inventory Kittens Cats Puppy Sm Dog Lrg Dog No Weig Total Owned Quarantine Sheltered Total 0 333 333 0 160 160 0 52 52 0 19 19 2 433 435 2 999 1,001 At AAC - Sheltered Only Kittens Cat Puppy Sm Dog Lrg Dog No Weig Total 0 2 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 1 0 0 2 66 469 15 1 10 7 6 1 8 7 15 1 606 20 290 44 92 8 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 5 0 184 0 0 184 10 10 59 1 0 0 0 0 3 3 10 0 96 1 63 0 64 3 0 0 1 0 5 0 0 0 0 0 0 23 0 23 1 0 0 0 0 0 7 1 0 0 0 0 9 0 10 0 10 2 1 0 6 6 7 0 5 3 0 1 0 2 1 2 110 390 112 393 149 29 321 Not at AAC - Sheltered Only Kitten Cat Puppy Sm Dog Lrg Dog Total Adopt Adopt-Rto Cactus Cat CK APD CK TCSO Quarantine Foster No Hold Partner Reclaim Snr Surgery Total At Vet In Foster TLAC Total Cat & Dog Intakes & Outcomes 10/31/2024 Intakes Owner Surrender Public Assist Stray - ACO Stray - Citizen Total Outcomes ADOPTION Owned Quarantine RTO Return to Owner RTO-ADOPT TRANSFER Total Difference Kittens Cat Puppy Sm Dog Lrg Dog Others Total 3 0 1 0 0 4 3 2 1 7 29 42 0 1 0 0 12 13 9 0 0 0 2 0 0 0 1 5 6 3 0 0 0 7 0 0 0 0 3 3 1 0 0 0 0 1 10 0 0 0 3 7 6 1 2 1 1 0 1 0 3 2 6 19 1 2 1 10 33 11 10 11 Kittens Cat Puppy Sm Dog Total Kittens Cats Puppies Sm Dog Lrg Dogs Total Total -2 4 -2 1 -2 -1

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Item 2 - FY25 Outcome Intake Data original pdf

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Information is from October 1, 2024– November 30, 2024 Information compiled via ASO Power BI dashboards. Difference of outcomes - intakes Outcome Year (fiscal) Intake Year (fiscal) Dog totals Cat totals Totals Dog totals Cat totals Totals Dog totals Cat totals Totals Cats Adoption Transfer Euthanasia Died Missing Total Dog Adoption Transfer Euthanasia Died Missing Total RTO/RTO Adopt SNR (former SCRP) RTO/RTO Adopt 2025 748 982 1730 2025 727 984 1711 2025 -21 2 -19 2025 662 32 168 27 20 0 75 984 2025 472 118 107 28 2 0 727

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Item 2 - November Animal Services Report original pdf

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November 2024 AUSTIN ANIMAL SERVICES REPORT 1 Animal Services News • The live outcome rate for November was 96.09%. • A total of 762 animals were brought to the shelter which included 395 cats, 327 dogs, 25 wild animals, 6 rabbits, 2 guinea pigs, 2 ferrets, and 1 goat. • A total of 547 animals were adopted (101 adult dogs, 121 puppies, 244 kittens, and 81 adult cats). • A total of 62 dogs and cats were returned to their owners (RTOs and RTO-Adopt). • On November 1, there were 1,001 dogs and cats within the ASO inventory (606 onsite, 390 in foster, 1 at a vet clinic, and 2 at TLAC). • On December 1, there were 937 dogs and cats within the ASO inventory (551 onsite, 384 in foster, 1 at a vet clinic, and 1 at TLAC). Animal Protection • Animal Protection Officers (APOs) returned 50 animals to their owners in the field. • Officers handed out 32 fencing assistance applications and implanted 4 microchip(s). • Officers impounded 111 injured animals and delivered approximately 54 wildlife animals to Austin Wildlife Rescue. • Officers entered 194 rabies exposure reports and submitted 30 specimens for rabies testing. We had 6 positive bats and 3 decomposed bats. • There were 92 total coyote related activities (Behavior types include Sighting, Encounter, Incident, and Observation. “Observation” is defined as hearing coyotes howling and finding scat or footprints.) o 37 sightings o 34 wild sick o 10 incidents o 4 wild speak o 3 observations o 2 encounters o 2 wild injured • Out of 92 coyote related activities, 52 (57%) reports fell within the reported behavior types (sighting, encounter, incident, and observation) o Encounters: Pets were a factor in 2/2 (100%) of encounters reported. ▪ 1/2 encounters (50%) involved a coyote entering a fenced backyard with dog present ▪ 1/2 encounters (50%) involved a coyote following a resident and dog 2 o Incidents: Pets were a factor in 10/10 (100%) of incidents reported. ▪ 3/10 incidents (30%) involved a coyote killing an unsupervised outside cat ▪ 1/10 incidents (10%) involved a coyote killing two unsupervised off-leash dogs ▪ 1/10 incidents (10%) involved a coyote killing a free-ranging chicken ▪ 2/10 incidents (20%) involved a coyote eating an animal, but unsure if domesticated or wildlife ▪ 1/10 incidents (10%) involved a coyote growling at the caller ▪ 1/10 incidents (10%) involved two coyotes …

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Item 3 - Strategic Planning Update Presentation original pdf

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Strategic Planning Update to Animal Advisory Commission Susana Carbajal, Assistant City Manager Audrey Muntz, Budget and Performance Manager Dr. Larry Schooler, Consultant December 9, 2024 Working Group Progress Total of six working group meetings through November Report/analysis of community + staff engagement • Discussion of overall vision • Development of focus areas, goals, and strategies Recommended operational changes Representation from • • • • Humane Society • Classic Canines Austin Pets Alive! • Emancipet • Travis County • Austin Lost and Found • Pets TRAPRS • • Cat volunteers • Community stakeholders • • CMO ASO Staff 2 Progress on the “elephants in the room” • Group continues to value “no kill” policy • Continuation of formal policy • Reframe goal • Prioritizing and Maintaining Open Intake • Spay/neuter services given additional priority, both at Austin Animal Center and through partnerships with community organizations (increase free/low-cost options); trap-neuter- release also prioritized 3 Plan Refinement • Planning Team has convened to refine the draft to ensure the plan is cohesive and consistent and can be easily understood by the community while continuing to reflect the Working Group's intent • Refined plan will be shared with Working Group for review ahead of January meeting 4 Plan Definitions • Vision: A shared idea of what the community will experience when ASO implements this plan. • Mission: The core purpose and role ASO serves in supporting the community and achieving the vision. ASO’s mission will not be updated as part of this process. • Focus Area: High-level priorities. These foundational elements guide ASO in advancing its mission and achieving its vision. • Description: A brief overview of each focus area. • Goals: A specific end-result that ASO envisions, plans, and commits to achieve. • Measure: How ASO will track progress toward achieving its goals. Targets will be developed to gauge progress year to year. • Strategies: Actionable plans or methods that ASO will take to achieve its goals. 5 Focus Areas • Humane Care • Open Intake • Ensure a high quality of life for animals in shelter and foster care by providing enrichment, behavioral support, and well-maintained facilities. • Maintain open intake for strays and owner surrenders and facilitate care by partners or the public, while reducing demand for intake by managing stray populations and providing resources to help owners keep their pets. • Spay Neuter (pending Working Group discussion on keeping as …

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Agenda original pdf

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REGULAR MEETING of the ANIMAL ADVISORY COMMISSION October 14, 2024, 6 p.m. Austin City Hall, Room 1101 301 W. 2nd St Austin, Texas 78701 Some members of the Animal Advisory Commission may be participating by videoconference. The meeting may be viewed online at: http://www.austintexas.gov/page/watch-atxn-live Public comment will be allowed in-person or remotely via telephone. Speakers may only register to speak on an item once either in-person or remotely and will be allowed up to three minutes to provide their comments. Registration no later than noon the day before the meeting is required for remote participation by telephone. To register to speak remotely, contact Eric Anderson at eric.anderson@austintexas.gov or (512) 974-2562. CURRENT COMMISSIONERS: Ryan Clinton, Chair, Travis County Nancy Nemer, Parliamentarian, Travis County Lotta Smagula, D1 Beatriz Dulzaides, D2 Ann Linder, Vice Chair, D3 Dr. Paige Nilson, D4 Whitney Holt, D5 Luis Herrera, D6 Larry Tucker, D7 Sarah Huddleston, D9 Dr. Amanda Bruce, D10 Laura Hoke, Mayor CALL TO ORDER PUBLIC COMMUNICATION: GENERAL AGENDA The first 10 speakers signed up prior to the meeting being called to order will each be allowed a three-minute allotment to address their concerns regarding items not posted on the agenda. APPROVAL OF MINUTES 1. Approve the minutes of the Animal Advisory Commission Regular Meeting on August 12, 2024. Approve the minutes of the Animal Advisory Commission Regular Meeting on September 9, 2024. 2. STAFF BRIEFING 3. DISCUSSION ITEMS 4. 5. 6. Staff briefing regarding monthly reports provided by the Animal Service Center. Presentation by Austin Pets Alive! regarding license agreement reports Discussion of the Animal Services strategic plan and planning process. Discussion of the first Austin Animal Center/Good Fix spay and neuter clinic held at the Travis County Expo Center from 9/24 to 9/28. DISCUSSION AND ACTION ITEMS 7. 8. FUTURE AGENDA ITEMS Approve a recommendation to Council to ban glue traps at City of Austin owned and/or managed facilities. Approve the Animal Advisory Commission 2025 meeting schedule. ADJOURNMENT The City of Austin is committed to compliance with the American with Disabilities Act. Reasonable modifications and equal access to communications will be provided upon request. Meeting locations are planned with wheelchair access. If requiring Sign Language Interpreters or alternative formats, please give notice at least 2 days (48 hours) before the meeting date. (512) 974-2562 or Please contact Eric Anderson, Office of eric.anderson@austintexas.gov for additional information; TTY users route through Relay Texas at 711. For …

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Item 3 - Austin Animal Center September 2024 Data Report original pdf

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Animal Services Office Statistical Report – September2022-2024 September2024 Intake September2023 Intakes September2022 Intakes September2024 Adoptions September2023 Adoptions September2022 Adoptions September2024 RTOs September2023 RTOs September2022 RTOs September2024 Animals Euthanized September2023 Animals Euthanized September2022 Animals Euthanized September2024 Total Live Release Rate September2023 Total Live Release Rate September2022 Total Live Release Rate September2024 Animal Vaccinations September2023 Animal Vaccinations September2022 Animal Vaccinations September 2024 Spayed/Neuter at AAC September2023 Spayed/Neutered at AAC September2022 Spayed/Neutered at AAC September2024 Animal Deaths at AAC/Foster September2023 Animal Deaths at AAC/Foster September2022 Animal Deaths at AAC/Foster September2024 Animals Transferred: September2023 Animals Transferred September2022 Animals Transferred September2024 Animal Lost, Stolen or Missing September2023 Animals Lost, Stolen or Missing September2022 Animals Lost, Stolen or Missing September2024 SNR Program September2023 SNR Program September2022 SNR Program September2024 Intact Animals Adopted/RTO September2023 Intact Animals Adopted/RTO September2022 Intact Animals Adopted/RTO

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Item 3 - FY24 Outcomes original pdf

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Information is from October 1, 2023 – September 30, 2024 Information compiled via ASO Power BI dashboards. Difference of outcomes - intakes Outcome Year (fiscal) Intake Year (fiscal) Dog totals Cat totals Totals Dog totals Cat totals Totals Dog totals Cat totals Totals Cats Adoption Transfer Euthanasia Died Missing Total Dog Adoption Transfer Euthanasia Died Missing Total RTO/RTO Adopt SNR (former SCRP) RTO/RTO Adopt 2024 5211 5859 11070 2024 5205 5727 10932 2024 -6 -132 -138 2024 3362 139 1146 100 67 4 415 5727 2024 3210 715 763 81 26 3 5205

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Item 3 - September Animal Services Report original pdf

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September 2024 AUSTIN ANIMAL SERVICES REPORT 1 Animal Services News • The live outcome rate for September was 97.59%. • A total of 1,002 animals were brought to the shelter which included 568 cats, 399 dogs, 27 wild animals, 3 chickens, 2 guinea pigs, 2 pigeons, and 1 pig. • A total of 578 animals were adopted (142 adult dogs, 111 puppies, 1 neonatal puppy, 252 kittens, and 72 adult cats). • A total of 97 dogs and cats were returned to their owners (RTOs and RTO-Adopt). • On September 1, there were 892 dogs and cats within the ASO inventory (524 onsite, 364 in foster, 1 at a vet clinic, and 2 at TLAC). • On October 1, there were 936 dogs and cats within the ASO inventory (550 onsite, 384 in foster, 1 at a vet clinic, and 1 at TLAC). Animal Protection • Animal Protection Officers (APOs) returned 55 animals to their owners in the field. • Officers handed out 24 fencing assistance applications and implanted 8 microchip(s). • Officers impounded 136 injured animals and delivered approximately 74 wildlife animals to • Officers entered 196 rabies exposure reports and submitted specimens for rabies testing. We had Austin Wildlife Rescue. 12 positive bats and 4 decomposed bats. • From September 1 to September 191, there were 53 total coyote related activities (Behavior types include Sighting, Encounter, Incident, and Observation. “Observation” is defined as hearing coyotes howling and finding scat or footprints.) o 31 Wild Sick o 18 Sightings o 2 o 2 Encounters Incidents • Out of 53 coyote related activities, 22 (42%) reports fell within the reported behavior types (sighting, encounter, incident, and observation) o Encounters: Pets were a factor in 2/2 (100%) of encounters reported. ▪ An encounter involved a coyote with mange “trying to go after dog” ▪ An encounter involved 3 coyotes following resident and dog o Incidents: Pets were a factor in 2/2 (100%) of incidents reported ▪ An incident involved a coyote killing an outside unsupervised cat ▪ An incident involved two coyotes injuring an outside unsupervised cat 1 Dataset incomplete for the month of September due to reporting staff on personal leave. Data will be added to next month’s report. • Out of 53 coyote related reports, 33 (62%) reports were updated to the correct behavior types. 2 o 14 sightings updated to wild sick (Due to mange) o Residents are …

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Item 4 - Austin Pets Alive! September License Agreement Report original pdf

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Monthly Report on License Agreement 2024-09 September This report is in agreement with the terms outlined in Section 8.4 of the License Agreement between the City of Austin and Austin Pets Alive! with a focus on APA!’s impact on Travis County through our partnership with Austin Animal Center. Austin Pets Alive! (APA!) is consistently the city of Austin’s largest partner in lifesaving. Our mission is to keep Austin No Kill by taking in the animals that have medical and behavioral concerns that the city cannot care for or treat. Since 2011, due to our partnership with Austin Animal Center to take the animals at risk of euthanasia, our city has been the largest No Kill city in the US. APA! Intakes transferred from AAC: In September 2024, 189 animals were transferred out of AAC to all rescue partners, per the AAC dashboard. Of these, 153 (81%) were credited to APA!. APA! records show 152 transfers. 60 animals were born in APA!’s care to pregnant animals sent from AAC. Additionally, APA! took in 14 pets directly from owners within Travis county through the PASS program that should have otherwise entered AAC. This makes for 74 intakes diverted from AAC in September. AAC - Cat Behavior AAC - Cat Bottle Baby AAC - Cat Maternity AAC - Cat Medical AAC - Cat Space AAC - Dog Behavior Large/Medium AAC - Dog Behavior Small AAC - Dog Bottle Baby AAC - Dog Maternity AAC - Dog Medical AAC - Dog Parvo Transfer AAC - Dog Space Large/Medium AAC - Dog Space Small TOTAL DIRECT TRANSFERS AAC - Cat BIC AAC - Dog BIC TOTAL AAC Travis - PASS Travis - Parvo OS/PASS TOTAL TRANSFER + DIVERSIONS 0 54 10 24 7 5 0 5 2 18 17 10 0 152 24 36 212 11 3 226 1 of 5 © 2024 Austin Pets Alive! Operations Comparison APA and AAC serve the community in tandem and our combined efforts impact the live release rate across the city, county and surrounding areas. For September 2024: Intake (cats & dogs) 967 646 AAC APA! S/N at shelter Adoptions In Foster (10/8) 404 880 578 498 TOTAL 1,613 1,284 1,076 454 270 724 APA! Transfers from AAC as % of AAC Intakes APA must: (a) select a sufficient number of animals from the At-Risk List so that at the end of each year of the Term APA …

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Item 7 - Glue Trap Ban Draft Recommendation original pdf

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Recommendation The Animal Advisory Commission recommends that City of Austin ban the purchase of and usage of all glue traps at City owned and/or managed facilities. Description of Recommendation to Council The Austin Animal Advisory Commission recommends that the Austin City Council and the Austin City Manager’s Office update City building management practices to ban the purchase and usage of all glue traps at City owned and/or managed facilities due to the ineffective, unsanitary, and gruesome outcomes of glue traps. Basis for Recommendation killed in these traps. 1. Glue traps are indiscriminate. As a result, wildlife and pets can and do get caught, maimed, and 2. Glue traps are inefficient and are not a long-term solution for pest control. When rodents are killed, the survivors and newcomers breed faster, which causes an increase in the population. Proper facilities maintained to plug holes, cut grass, and usage of more humane traps are significantly more effective in the short and long term. The only long-term way to control rodent populations is to eliminate the conditions that attract and sustain them. Without addressing the underlying factors and humanely removing and preventing animals from returning, infestations will persist. Identifying and sealing entry points, removing food and water sources, maintaining clean environments, and usage of more humane traps are the most effective in the short and long term. 3. Glue traps are a health hazard. The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention warns the public not to use glue traps because they increase people’s exposure to disease. Animals stuck in the glue continue to produce urine and feces, through which pathogens, including hantavirus, salmonella, and the bacteria that cause leptospirosis, are transmitted. 4. Glue Traps are inhumane and cause prolonged suffering. Animal trapped in the glue panic and struggle, which causes them to become even more ensnarled. Often, the glue tears off their fur, feathers, or skin. Some break bones or even chew off their own limbs in a desperate attempt to escape. The screaming of ensnared wildlife is extremely upsetting to people who don’t know how to “dispose” of these sentient beings. Left alone, the terrified, injured animals die, sometimes days later, of blood loss, shock, suffocation, or thirst. Or they die from being crushed in the garbage, which is where the instructions on the traps advise consumers to put them.

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Item 1 - Aug 12 2024 Draft Minutes original pdf

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ANIMAL ADVISORY COMMISSION REGULAR MEETING MINUTES AUGUST 12, 2024 The Animal Advisory Commission convened in a regular meeting on August 12, 2024, at 301 W. 2nd St in Austin, Texas. Chair Clinton called the Animal Advisory Commission Meeting to order at 6:00 p.m. Commissioners in Attendance: Ryan Clinton, Chair, Travis County Sarah Huddleston, D9 Larry Tucker, D7 Commissioners in Attendance Remotely: Ann Linder, Vice Chair, D3 Nancy Nemer, Parliamentarian, Travis County Luis Herrera, D6 Laura Hoke, Mayor’s Appointee Whitney Holt, D5 Lotta Smagula, D1 Commissioners Absent: Amanda Bruce, D10 Beatriz Dulzaides, D2 Paige Nilson, D4 PUBLIC COMMUNICATION: GENERAL Tracey B – Foster/TNR Rochelle Vickery – Spay and Neuter Kristyn Williams – TNR/Rescue/Medical Vouchers APPROVAL OF MINUTES 1. Approve the minutes of the Animal Advisory Commission Regular Meeting on July 8, 2024. 1 The minutes from the meeting of July 8, 2024, were approved on Commissioner Nemer’s motion, Vice Chair Linder’s second on a 7-0 vote. Chair Clinton and Commissioner Holt abstained. Commissioners Bruce, Dulzaides, and Nilson were absent. STAFF BRIEFING 2. Staff briefing regarding monthly reports provided by the Animal Service Center. The presentation was made by Don Bland, Chief Animal Services Officer, Austin Animal Services. Commissioner Smagula requested that Animal Services staff provide additional information related to the July 2024 Animal Deaths at AAC/Foster charts in the Austin Animal Center July 2024 Data Report. Vice Chair Linder requested that Animal Services staff provide information on the number of clinics accepting medical vouchers and the average wait times for intake of sick/injured and healthy animals. DISCUSSION ITEMS 3. Discussion of the Animal Services strategic plan and planning process. A presentation was made by Stephanie Hayden-Howard, Assistant City Manager; Audrey Muntz, Budget and Performance Manager, Financial Services; Dr. Larry Schooler, Consultant. Commissioner Holt recused herself from the discussion. FUTURE AGENDA ITEMS None. A motion to adjourn the meeting at 6:51 p.m. was approved on Commissioner Huddleston’s motion, Commissioner Hoke’s second on a 9-0 vote. Commissioners Bruce, Dulzaides, and Nilson were absent. The minutes were approved at the XX, meeting on Commissioner XX’s motion, Commissioner XX’s second on a X-X vote. 2

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Item 2 - September 9 2024 Draft Minutes original pdf

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ANIMAL ADVISORY COMMISSION REGULAR MEETING MINUTES SEPTEMBER 9, 2024 The Animal Advisory Commission convened in a regular meeting on September 9, 2024, at 301 W. 2nd St in Austin, Texas. Chair Clinton called the Animal Advisory Commission Meeting to order at 6:07 p.m. Commissioners in Attendance: Ryan Clinton, Chair, Travis County Whitney Holt, D5 Sarah Huddleston, D9 Dr. Paige Nilson, D4 Lotta Smagula, D1 Commissioners in Attendance Remotely: Ann Linder, Vice Chair, D3 Beatriz Dulzaides, D2 Commissioners Absent: Nancy Nemer, Parliamentarian, Travis County Dr. Amanda Bruce, D10 Luis Herrera, D6 Laura Hoke, Mayor’s Appointee Larry Tucker, D7 PUBLIC COMMUNICATION: GENERAL Catherine Chamblee - Exacerbation and strain caused on Austin’s own stray and shelter animal population by transportation of more out of area shelter animals into Austin Remington Johnson – Enforcement of Kennel Size Pat Valls-Trelles – Process, Policy, Progress, etc. Sandra Muller – Dog Bite Scale, Live Release Rate, Austin Pets Alive! Repairs APPROVAL OF MINUTES 1 1. STAFF BRIEFING 2. Approve the minutes of the Animal Advisory Commission Regular Meeting on August 12, 2024. The motion to approve the minutes from the meeting of July 8, 2024, failed on Commissioner Smagula’s motion, Commissioner Holt’s second on a 6-0 vote. Commissioner Nilson abstained. Parliamentarian Nemer, Commissioners Bruce, Herrera, Hoke, and Tucker were absent. Staff briefing regarding monthly reports provided by the Animal Service Center. The presentation was made by Don Bland, Chief Animal Services Officer, Austin Animal Services and Jason Garza, Deputy Chief Animal Services Officer, Austin Animal Services. Commissioner Smagula requested that Animal Services staff provide information on which category the animals listed in the “Lost, Stolen, or Missing” fall under. Commissioner Dulzaides requested that Animal Services staff provide information on how many animals are microchipped each month. DISCUSSION ITEMS 3. Discussion of the Animal Services strategic plan and planning process. A presentation was made by Stephanie Hayden-Howard, Assistant City Manager; Samantha Eaton Moncayo, Business Process Consultant, Senior, Financial Services; Dr. Larry Schooler, Consultant. Commissioner Holt recused herself from the discussion. Discussion of City of Austin use of glue traps for pest control. Discussed. 4. FUTURE AGENDA ITEMS None. A motion to adjourn the meeting at 7:21 p.m. was approved on Commissioner Nilson’s motion, Commissioner Huddleston’s second on a 7-0 vote. Parliamentarian Nemer, Commissioners Bruce, Herrera, Hoke, and Tucker were absent. The minutes were approved at the XX, meeting on Commissioner XX’s motion, Commissioner XX’s second on a X-X …

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Oct. 14, 2024

Item 3 - Daily Inventory Report October 1 2024 original pdf

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Cat & Dog Inventory 10/1/2024 Total Inventory Kittens Cats Puppy Sm Dog Lrg Dog No Weig Total Sheltered Total 277 277 165 165 55 55 26 26 406 406 At AAC - Sheltered Only Kittens Cat Puppy Sm Dog Lrg Dog No Weig Total 7 7 0 0 0 0 0 0 6 0 0 1 0 7 936 936 34 2 7 1 19 88 368 3 5 11 12 550 38 254 9 0 0 0 5 0 0 0 1 65 23 174 0 0 174 9 0 7 0 11 11 41 1 1 2 11 94 1 70 0 71 5 0 0 0 0 3 0 0 1 0 0 8 0 8 3 0 0 0 0 1 6 2 1 2 0 0 11 0 11 8 2 0 1 3 8 0 3 5 0 0 1 1 1 121 384 122 386 103 47 15 284 Not at AAC - Sheltered Only Kitten Cat Puppy Sm Dog Lrg Dog Total Adopt APD Work Cactus Cat CK APD CK TCSO Foster No Hold Partner Quarantine Reclaim Snr Total At Vet In Foster TLAC Total Cat & Dog Intakes & Outcomes 09/30/2024 Intakes Owner Surrender Public Assist Stray - ACO Stray - Citizen Total Outcomes ADOPTION Euthanasia Return to Owner TRANSFER Total Difference Kittens Cat Puppy Sm Dog Lrg Dog Others Total 0 0 0 0 1 1 5 0 0 1 0 6 5 13 2 6 36 62 0 7 0 0 23 30 6 0 0 2 8 0 2 0 3 10 15 2 1 2 0 5 0 1 1 0 1 3 3 0 1 1 5 0 3 1 2 1 7 11 1 3 3 18 Kittens Cat Sm Dog Total Kittens Cats Puppies Sm Dog Lrg Dogs Total Total -22 -10 -3 -2 0 -37

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Item 3 - Daily Inventory Report September 1 2024 original pdf

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Cat & Dog Inventory 9/1/2024 Total Inventory Owned Quarantine Sheltered Total 0 255 255 0 125 125 At AAC - Sheltered Only Kittens Cats Puppy Sm Dog Lrg Dog No Weig Total Kittens Cat Puppy Sm Dog Lrg Dog No Weig Total 34 34 265 0 77 77 6 0 0 0 1 7 0 1 0 0 28 0 28 0 2 2 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 1 0 2 1 891 892 31 2 6 3 36 392 8 9 10 27 524 1 412 413 15 2 0 1 4 0 6 5 0 0 2 0 20 20 3 0 0 0 2 3 1 0 2 0 0 9 0 9 1 2 112 364 114 367 24 55 5 0 0 0 0 1 0 5 165 0 0 165 2 0 6 2 5 0 2 1 22 74 1 50 0 51 90 49 11 298 Not at AAC - Sheltered Only Kitten Cat Puppy Sm Dog Lrg Dog Total Adopt Adopt-Rto Cactus Cat CK TCSO Foster No Hold Partner Quarantine Reclaim Snr Total At Vet In Foster TLAC Total Cat & Dog Intakes & Outcomes 08/31/2024 Intakes Owner Surrender Stray - ACO Stray - Citizen Total Outcomes ADOPTION Euthanasia Return to Owner TRANSFER Total Difference Kittens Cat Puppy Sm Dog Lrg Dog Others Total 1 0 0 0 1 1 2 3 6 12 0 0 0 3 3 24 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 1 1 1 0 Cat 11 24 13 0 0 0 1 1 1 0 0 0 1 0 2 3 0 5 8 0 0 1 9 0 0 0 1 1 44 1 1 1 47 Kittens Puppy Sm Dog Total Kittens Cats Puppies Sm Dog Lrg Dogs Total Total 21 12 0 4 2 39

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Item 5 - Strategic Planning Update Presentation original pdf

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Strategic Planning Update to Animal Advisory Commission Audrey Muntz, Budget and Performance Manager Dr. Larry Schooler, Consultant October 14, 2024 Working Group Progress Third and fourth working group meetings on September 12th and 17th • Report/analysis of community + staff engagement • Development of goals and consolidation in categories • Discussion of overall vision • Recommended operational changes 2 Working Group Next Steps • Work on strategic plan framework • Focus areas • Goals • Objectives • Revisit (and offer potential revision of) ASO mission statement • Craft consensus direction on • No Kill Intake • • Spay/Neuter 3 Assessment Phase Stakeholder Engagement Reports Community Survey Report • A community survey was available from July 17 to August 14, 2024 • A detailed report on survey results can be found on the ASO Strategic Plan PublicInput page under the Share Your Thoughts tab • ASO Strategic Plan Community Survey Report 2024.pdf Staff and Volunteer Interview and Listening Session Report • Interviews and listening sessions were conducted with staff and volunteers from July 9 to August 20, 2024 • A report on the process and the results of these engagements can be found on the PublicInput page under the Share Your Thoughts tab • ASO Strategic Plan Staff & Volunteer Interview & Listening Session Report 2024.pdf Strategic Plan Updates Stay informed on ASO strategic planning and find Community Survey and Listening Session reports at www.publicinput.com/ASOplan2024

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Item 4 - Austin Pets Alive! August License Agreement Report original pdf

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Monthly Report on License Agreement 2024-08 August This report is in agreement with the terms outlined in Section 8.4 of the License Agreement between the City of Austin and Austin Pets Alive! with a focus on APA!’s impact on Travis County through our partnership with Austin Animal Center. Austin Pets Alive! (APA!) is consistently the city of Austin’s largest partner in lifesaving. APA! takes animals that have medical and behavioral concerns that require a higher cost per animal than the average healthy animal, in an effort to have a measurable effect on the live release rate at AAC. APA! Intakes transferred from AAC: 147 animals were transferred out of AAC to all rescue partners in August per the AAC dashboard. Of these, 127 (86.4%) were credited to APA!. However, APA! documented 142 total transfers from AAC in August, with the discrepancy showing in dog numbers. This discrepancy may be due to differences in the recorded dates of boarding dogs being permanently transferred to APA! for adoption. 31 animals were born in APA!’s care to pregnant animals sent from AAC. Additionally, APA! took in 14 pets directly from owners within Travis county through the PASS program that should have otherwise entered AAC. This makes for 45 intakes diverted from AAC in August. AAC-APA! Dog Boarding Agreement: A total of 18 dogs were transferred to APA! for boarding in August: ● 1 returned to AAC for owner reclaim ● 8 were adopted through APA! (reflected as Dog Space transfers) ● 9 remain in boarding custody AAC - Cat Behavior AAC - Cat Bottle Baby AAC - Cat Maternity AAC - Cat Medical AAC - Cat Space AAC - Dog Behavior Large/Medium AAC - Dog Behavior Small AAC - Dog Bottle Baby AAC - Dog Maternity AAC - Dog Medical AAC - Dog Parvo Transfer AAC - Dog Space Large/Medium AAC - Dog Space Small TOTAL DIRECT TRANSFERS AAC - Cat BIC AAC - Dog BIC TOTAL AAC Travis - PASS Travis - Parvo OS/PASS TOTAL TRANSFER + DIVERSIONS 0 81 4 20 0 5 1 0 9 2 9 0 11 142 13 18 173 10 4 187 1 of 3 © 2024 Austin Pets Alive! Operations Comparison APA and AAC serve the community in tandem and our combined efforts impact the live release rate across the city, county and surrounding areas. For August 2024: S/N at shelter Adoptions Intake (cats & …

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Item 4 - Austin Pets Alive! July License Agreement Report original pdf

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Monthly Report on License Agreement 2024-07 July This report is in agreement with the terms outlined in Section 8.4 of the License Agreement between the City of Austin and Austin Pets Alive! with a focus on APA!’s impact on Travis County through our partnership with Austin Animal Center. Austin Pets Alive! (APA!) is consistently the city of Austin’s largest partner in lifesaving. APA! takes animals that have medical and behavioral concerns that require a higher cost per animal than the average healthy animal, in an effort to have a measurable effect on the live release rate at AAC. APA! Intakes transferred from AAC: 198 animals were transferred out of AAC to all rescue partners in July per the AAC dashboard. Of these, 170 (85.6%) were credited to APA!. However, APA! documented 199 total transfers from AAC in July, with the largest discrepancy being in cat numbers. 40 animals were born in APA!’s care to pregnant animals sent from AAC. Additionally, APA! took in 31 pets directly from owners within Travis county through the PASS program that should have otherwise entered AAC. This makes for 71 intakes diverted from AAC in July. Also in July, AAC and APA! reinstated the boarding program agreement that was piloted in 2023. The first 5 dogs moved to TLAC at the end of July, and more are planned for early August. AAC - Cat Behavior AAC - Cat Bottle Baby AAC - Cat Maternity AAC - Cat Medical AAC - Cat Space AAC - Dog Behavior Large/Medium AAC - Dog Behavior Small AAC - Dog Bottle Baby AAC - Dog Maternity AAC - Dog Medical AAC - Dog Parvo Transfer AAC - Dog Space Large/Medium AAC - Dog Space Small TOTAL DIRECT TRANSFERS AAC - Cat BIC AAC - Dog BIC TOTAL AAC Travis - PASS Travis - Parvo OS/PASS TOTAL TRANSFER + DIVERSIONS 1 111 10 30 0 5 0 0 3 4 0 0 35 199 19 21 239 25 6 270 1 of 3 © 2024 Austin Pets Alive! All Rights Reserved Operations Comparison APA and AAC serve the community in tandem and our combined efforts impact the live release rate across the city, county and surrounding areas. For July 2024: Intake S/N at shelter Adoptions AAC APA! TOTAL 889 718 1,607 430 548 978 In Foster (8/6) 490 913 769 550 1,403 1,319 APA! Transfers from AAC as % of AAC …

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Item 7 - Glue Trap Ban Draft Recommendation Version 2 original pdf

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Recommendation The Animal Advisory Commission recommends that City of Austin prohibit the purchase of and usage of all glue traps at City-owned and/or City-managed facilities. Description of Recommendation to Council The Austin Animal Advisory Commission recommends that the Austin City Council and the Austin City Manager’s Office update City building management practices to prohibit the purchase and use of all glue traps at City owned and/or managed facilities due to the unsanitary and inhumane outcomes of using these traps. Basis for Recommendation 1. Glue traps are a public health hazard. The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention warns the public not to use glue traps because they increase people’s exposure to disease. Animals stuck in the glue may carry harmful pathogens. In addition, while trapped, these animals continue to produce urine and feces. Pathogens, including hantavirus, salmonella, and the bacteria that cause leptospirosis, can be transmitted from these animals and through their waste. 2. Glue traps are indiscriminate. As a result, species of wildlife, including birds, bats, and other species of native wildlife are unintentionally caught and killed in these traps. Pets can also be caught and harmed by glue traps. 3. Glue traps are inhumane and cause prolonged and unnecessary suffering. Animals caught in glue traps often panic and struggle, which leads to them becoming even more entangled. This struggle can result in the glue pulling off their fur, feathers, or skin. Some animals may break their bones or even gnaw off their own limbs as they struggle to free themselves. The distressing sounds made by trapped wildlife can be unsettling for many, and workers who encounter these animals may be unsure of how to humanely handle the situation. If left alone, these frightened and injured creatures can suffer and die over several days from blood loss, shock, suffocation, or dehydration. In some instances, they perish after being crushed in the trash, as the instructions on the traps suggest disposing of them in this manner. This poses further health risks to City sanitation workers who may come into contact with dead or dying animals. 4. Better alternatives exist. Glue traps are not effective and do not provide a long-term solution for pest control. To manage rodent populations sustainably, it is essential to secure buildings and eliminate the conditions that attract them. Without addressing these underlying issues and humanely removing animals while preventing their return, infestations will continue. The …

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Item 3 - Austin Animal Center September 2024 Data Report Revised original pdf

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Animal Services Office Statistical Report – September2022-2024 September2024 Intake September2023 Intakes September2022 Intakes September2024 Adoptions September2023 Adoptions September2022 Adoptions September2024 RTOs September2023 RTOs September2022 RTOs September2024 Animals Euthanized September2023 Animals Euthanized September2022 Animals Euthanized September2024 Total Live Release Rate September2023 Total Live Release Rate September2022 Total Live Release Rate September2024 Animal Vaccinations September2023 Animal Vaccinations September2022 Animal Vaccinations September 2024 Spayed/Neuter at AAC September2023 Spayed/Neutered at AAC September2022 Spayed/Neutered at AAC September2024 Animal Deaths at AAC/Foster September2023 Animal Deaths at AAC/Foster September2022 Animal Deaths at AAC/Foster September2024 Animals Transferred: September2023 Animals Transferred September2022 Animals Transferred September2024 Animal Lost, Stolen or Missing September2023 Animals Lost, Stolen or Missing September2022 Animals Lost, Stolen or Missing September2024 SNR Program September2023 SNR Program September2022 SNR Program September2024 Intact Animals Adopted/RTO September2023 Intact Animals Adopted/RTO September2022 Intact Animals Adopted/RTO

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Approved Minutes original pdf

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ANIMAL ADVISORY COMMISSION REGULAR MEETING MINUTES OCTOBER 14, 2024 The Animal Advisory Commission convened in a regular meeting on October 14, 2024, at 301 W. 2nd St in Austin, Texas. Chair Clinton called the Animal Advisory Commission Meeting to order at 6:00 p.m. Commissioners in Attendance: Ryan Clinton, Chair, Travis County Luis Herrera, D6 Whitney Holt, D5 Dr. Paige Nilson, D4 Lotta Smagula, D1 Larry Tucker, D7 Commissioners in Attendance Remotely: Ann Linder, Vice Chair, D3 Dr. Amanda Bruce, D10 Laura Hoke, Mayor’s Appointee Sarah Huddleston, D9 Commissioners Absent: Beatriz Dulzaides, D2 PUBLIC COMMUNICATION: GENERAL Rochelle Vickery – Spay & neuter event, community cats program Laura Nesmith – Behind the misunderstood work behind TNR Deborah Ro – TNR’s positive impact on our community Jacobi Alvarez – TNR needs Diane Odegaard – Glue trap ban and bats Pat Valls Trelles – Community Cats Program 1 APPROVAL OF MINUTES 1. Approve the minutes of the Animal Advisory Commission Regular Meeting on August 12, 2024. The motion to approve the minutes from the meeting of August 12, 2024, was approved on Commissioner Holt’s motion, Commissioner Smagula’s second on a 9-0 vote. Commissioner Nilson abstained. Commissioner Dulzaides was absent. Approve the minutes of the Animal Advisory Commission Regular Meeting on September 9, 2024. The motion to approve the minutes from the meeting of September 9, 2024, with the following correction was approved on Commissioner Nilson’s motion, Commissioner Holt’s second on a 10-0 vote. Commissioner Dulzaides was absent. The correction was to revise the action for Item 1 to read: “The motion to approve the minutes from the meeting of August 12, 2024, failed on Commissioner Smagula’s motion, Commissioner Holt’s second on a 6-0 vote. Commissioner Nilson abstained. Parliamentarian Nemer, Commissioners Bruce, Herrera, Hoke, and Tucker were absent. STAFF BRIEFING 3. Staff briefing regarding monthly reports provided by the Animal Service Center. The presentation was made by Don Bland, Chief Animal Services Officer, Austin Animal Services and Jason Garza, Deputy Chief Animal Services Officer, Austin Animal Services. A motion to take up Item 7 next was made by Commissioner Holt, seconded by Commissioner Herrera, and approved on a 10-0 vote. Commissioner Dulzaides was absent. DISCUSSION AND ACTION ITEMS 7. Approve a recommendation to Council to ban glue traps at City of Austin owned and/or managed facilities. A motion to approve the recommendation was made by Commissioner Holt and seconded by Commissioner Herrera. A motion to …

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Sept. 9, 2024

Agenda original pdf

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REGULAR MEETING of the ANIMAL ADVISORY COMMISSION September 9, 2024, 6 p.m. Austin City Hall, Room 1101 301 W. 2nd St Austin, Texas 78701 Some members of the Animal Advisory Commission may be participating by videoconference. The meeting may be viewed online at: http://www.austintexas.gov/page/watch-atxn-live Public comment will be allowed in-person or remotely via telephone. Speakers may only register to speak on an item once either in-person or remotely and will be allowed up to three minutes to provide their comments. Registration no later than noon the day before the meeting is required for remote participation by telephone. To register to speak remotely, contact Eric Anderson at eric.anderson@austintexas.gov or (512) 974-2562. CURRENT COMMISSIONERS: Ryan Clinton, Chair, Travis County Nancy Nemer, Parliamentarian, Travis County Lotta Smagula, D1 Beatriz Dulzaides, D2 Ann Linder, Vice Chair, D3 Dr. Paige Nilson, D4 Whitney Holt, D5 Luis Herrera, D6 Larry Tucker, D7 Sarah Huddleston, D9 Dr. Amanda Bruce, D10 Laura Hoke, Mayor CALL TO ORDER PUBLIC COMMUNICATION: GENERAL AGENDA The first 10 speakers signed up prior to the meeting being called to order will each be allowed a three-minute allotment to address their concerns regarding items not posted on the agenda. APPROVAL OF MINUTES 1. Approve the minutes of the Animal Advisory Commission Regular Meeting on August 12, 2024. STAFF BRIEFING 2. Staff briefing regarding monthly reports provided by the Animal Service Center. DISCUSSION ITEMS 3. 4. FUTURE AGENDA ITEMS Discussion of the Animal Services strategic plan and planning process. Discussion of City of Austin use of glue traps for pest control. ADJOURNMENT The City of Austin is committed to compliance with the American with Disabilities Act. Reasonable modifications and equal access to communications will be provided upon request. Meeting locations are planned with wheelchair access. If requiring Sign Language Interpreters or alternative formats, please give notice at least 2 days (48 hours) before the meeting date. Please contact Eric Anderson, Office of (512) 974-2562 or eric.anderson@austintexas.gov for additional information; TTY users route through Relay Texas at 711. For more information on the Animal Advisory Commission, please contact Eric Anderson at (512) 974-2562 or eric.anderson@austintexas.gov. the City Clerk at

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Item 1 - Draft August 12 2024 Animal Advisory Commission Minutes original pdf

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ANIMAL ADVISORY COMMISSION REGULAR MEETING MINUTES AUGUST 12, 2024 The Animal Advisory Commission convened in a regular meeting on August 12, 2024, at 301 W. 2nd St in Austin, Texas. Chair Clinton called the Animal Advisory Commission Meeting to order at 6:00 p.m. Commissioners in Attendance: Ryan Clinton, Chair, Travis County Sarah Huddleston, D9 Larry Tucker, D7 Commissioners in Attendance Remotely: Ann Linder, Vice Chair, D3 Nancy Nemer, Parliamentarian, Travis County Luis Herrera, D6 Laura Hoke, Mayor’s Appointee Whitney Holt, D5 Lotta Smagula, D1 Commissioners Absent: Amanda Bruce, D10 Beatriz Dulzaides, D2 Paige Nilson, D4 PUBLIC COMMUNICATION: GENERAL Tracey B – Foster/TNR Rochelle Vickery – Spay and Neuter Kristyn Williams – TNR/Rescue/Medical Vouchers APPROVAL OF MINUTES 1. Approve the minutes of the Animal Advisory Commission Regular Meeting on July 8, 2024. 1 The minutes from the meeting of July 8, 2024, were approved on Commissioner Nemer’s motion, Vice Chair Linder’s second on a 7-0 vote. Chair Clinton and Commissioner Holt abstained. Commissioners Bruce, Dulzaides, and Nilson were absent. STAFF BRIEFING 2. Staff briefing regarding monthly reports provided by the Animal Service Center. The presentation was made by Don Bland, Chief Animal Services Officer, Austin Animal Services. Commissioner Smagula requested that Animal Services staff provide additional information related to the July 2024 Animal Deaths at AAC/Foster charts in the Austin Animal Center July 2024 Data Report. Vice Chair Linder requested that Animal Services staff provide information on the number of clinics accepting medical vouchers and the average wait times for intake of sick/injured and healthy animals. DISCUSSION ITEMS 3. Discussion of the Animal Services strategic plan and planning process. A presentation was made by Stephanie Hayden-Howard, Assistant City Manager; Audrey Muntz, Budget and Performance Manager, Financial Services; Dr. Larry Schooler, Consultant. Commissioner Holt recused herself from the discussion. FUTURE AGENDA ITEMS None. A motion to adjourn the meeting at 6:51 p.m. was approved on Commissioner Huddleston’s motion, Commissioner Hoke’s second on a 9-0 vote. Commissioners Bruce, Dulzaides, and Nilson were absent. The minutes were approved at the XX, meeting on Commissioner XX’s motion, Commissioner XX’s second on a X-X vote. 2

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Item 2 - Austin Animal Center August 2024 Data Report original pdf

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Animal Services Office Statistical Report – August2022-2024 August2024 Intake August2023 Intakes August2022 Intakes August2024 Adoptions August2023 Adoptions August2022 Adoptions August2024 RTOs August2023 RTOs August2022 RTOs August2024 Animals Euthanized August2023 Animals Euthanized August2022 Animals Euthanized August2024 Total Live Release Rate August2023 Total Live Release Rate August2022 Total Live Release Rate August2024 Animal Vaccinations August2023 Animal Vaccinations August2022 Animal Vaccinations August 2024 Spayed/Neuter at AAC August2023 Spayed/Neutered at AAC August2022 Spayed/Neutered at AAC August2024 Animal Deaths at AAC/Foster August2023 Animal Deaths at AAC/Foster August2022 Animal Deaths at AAC/Foster August2024 Animals Transferred: August2023 Animals Transferred August2022 Animals Transferred August2024 Animal Lost, Stolen or Missing August2023 Animals Lost, Stolen or Missing August2022 Animals Lost, Stolen or Missing August2024 SNR Program August2023 SNR Program August2022 SNR Program August2024 Intact Animals Adopted/RTO August2023 Intact Animals Adopted/RTO August2022 Intact Animals Adopted/RTO

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Item 2 - FY24 Outcome Through August 31 2024 original pdf

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Information is from October 1, 2023 – August 31, 2024 Information compiled via ASO Power BI dashboards. Difference of outcomes - intakes Outcome Year (fiscal) Intake Year (fiscal) Dog totals Cat totals Totals Dog totals Cat totals Totals Dog totals Cat totals Totals Cats Adoption Transfer Euthanasia Died Missing Total Dog Adoption Transfer Euthanasia Died Missing Total RTO/RTO Adopt SNR (former SCRP) RTO/RTO Adopt 2024 4812 5291 10103 2024 4798 5233 10031 2024 -14 -58 -72 2024 3362 139 1146 100 67 4 415 5233 2024 3210 715 763 81 26 3 4798

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Item 4 - Glue Trap Factsheet January 2024 original pdf

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What Is a Glue Trap? A glue trap is a small board made of cardboard, fiberboard, or plastic and coated with a sticky adhesive. It can ensnare any small animal who wanders across or lands on its surface. Glue Traps Are Indiscriminate Small “nontarget” animals, including birds, hamsters, lizards, snakes, and squirrels, often fall victim to these traps. Glue Traps Cause Prolonged Suffering Animals trapped in the glue panic and struggle, which causes them to become even more ensnarled. Often, the glue tears off their fur, feathers, or skin. Some break bones or even chew off their own limbs in a desperate attempt to escape. The screaming of ensnared wildlife is extremely upsetting to people who don’t know how to “dispose” of these sentient beings. Left alone, the terrified, injured animals die, sometimes days later, of blood loss, shock, suffocation, or thirst. Or they die from being crushed in the garbage, which is where the instructions on the traps advise consumers to put them. Glue Traps Are a Health Hazard The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention warns the public not to use glue traps because they increase people’s exposure to disease. Animals stuck in the glue continue to produce urine and feces, through which pathogens, including hantavirus, salmonella, and the bacteria that cause leptospirosis, are transmitted. Glue Traps Don’t Work Glue traps are not a long-term solution for controlling “unwanted houseguests.” When rodents are killed, the survivors and newcomers breed faster, which causes an increase in the population! And they fail to address the source of the problem: If holes aren’t plugged up and attractants aren’t removed, more animals will move in to take the place of those who have been killed. The Way Forward Multiple countries—including England, Iceland, Ireland, and New Zealand—as well as two states and one territory in Australia and nearly all 28 states and 8 union territories in India have banned glue traps. And hundreds of companies and other entities have prohibited their sale or use, including Target, Dollar General, Dollar Tree, Rite Aid, CVS, Walgreens, Walmart Canada, JPMorgan Chase & Co., Public Storage, and more than 100 airports. People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals 501 Front St., Norfolk, VA 23510 • 757-622-PETA • PETA.org GLUETRAPCRUELTY

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Item 4 - Glue Traps Reasons to Stop Using in Austin Operations Presentation original pdf

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Austin Can Lead the Way for Animals: Ending the Use of Glue Traps What are glue traps? A small board made of carboard, fiberboard or plastic and coated with a sticky adhesive. The glue trap is designed to ensnare any small animal who wanders across or lands on its surface. “One of the cruelest methods of killing animals in existence today…” – People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals (PETA), Glue Trap Fact Sheet. “Responsible for more suffering than virtually any other wildlife control product on the market…” –Humane Society of the United States (HSUS), Glue Boards. Why End the Use of Glue Traps? Five reasons to stop using glue traps in Austin • They inflict immense, prolonged suffering • They are indiscriminate • They are ineffective at addressing the problem • Customers are unaware of the cruelty • The CDC says not to use them Glue traps cause immense, prolonged suffering. Animals trapped in the glue panic and struggle, causing them to become even more stuck. In their desperation to break free, the glue tears off their skin or feathers. Some animals’ faces becomes stuck, leading to suffocation lasting hours. Some break bones or chew off their limbs, desperate to escape. Animals suffer slow, painful deaths and can be thrown in the garbage while still alive. Most trapped animals die of blood loss, shock, suffocation, or dehydration, after days of suffering. They die starved and exhausted. Instructions on glue boards have suggested that the traps be thrown away while the animal is still alive. Simply check reviews on Amazon to understand how inhumane glue traps are. They cause indiscriminate suffering. According to the Wildife Center of Virginia's WILD-ONe database, which collects information from wildlife rehabilitation and animal hospitals, 179 species of wildlife have been documented in glue traps, including some protected species of birds. • Source: Schwirtz, M. (2024, March 28). In New York City, glue traps face scrutiny amid push for humane rodent control. The New York Times. https://www.nytimes.com/2024/03/28/nyregion/glue-trap-rodents-nyc.html They do not solve the problem. The only long-term way to control rodent populations is to make the area unattractive and inaccessible to the animals. The CDC states: “Removing food sources, water, and items that provide shelter for rodents is the best way to prevent contact with rodents.” Consumers are not prepared. People report being unsure of how to handle discovering an animal immobilized on a glue trap. The …

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Item 4 - Ojai Administrative Report and Ordinance Language original pdf

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Administrative Report ACTION ITEM HONORABLE CITY COUNCIL Ben Harvey, City Manager Brian Popovich, Management Analyst TO: FROM: DATE REPORT PREPARED: MEETING DATE: February 27, 2024 February 16, 2024 SUBJECT: Introduction of Ordinance to Prohibit the Use and Sale of Glue Traps Within the City of Ojai Recommendation Introduce an Ordinance prohibiting the use and sale of glue traps within the City of Ojai. Discussion The issue of the use of glue traps has been raised in recent years by animal rights advocacy groups. Recently, the City Council has directed staff to draft an ordinance banning the use of glue traps. The City has a history of supporting items that promote animal welfare, including the recent passing of an ordinance adding the right to bodily liberty for elephants. Glue Traps Glue traps, also known as a sticky board or glue board, is composed of a layer of cardboard, plastic or wood that is coated with a non-drying adhesive, or a shallow tray of adhesive. The goal of the glue trap is to entrap rodents or other pests when they cross the board since their feet or other body parts get stuck in the adhesive. The animals are incapable of freeing themselves and slowly other parts of their bodies get stuck to the trap. After an extended amount of time, the captured animal typically dies from starvation, dehydration, or suffocation. The process is extremely cruel and painful, and subjects the animal to an inhumane and slow death. Glue traps are primarily used by homeowners, food processors and pest management companies to control rodent populations. Glue traps are commonly used for rodents, however, the People for Ethical Animal Treatment (“PETA”), states that these traps have been used to capture other wildlife such as birds, snakes and squirrels. According to PETA, there are reports of cats becoming stuck in glue traps and requiring veterinary assistance afterwards. Furthermore, the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (“CDC”) warns against the use of glue traps due to potentially producing harmful human health impacts as the trapped animals produce urine and feces. 344240.1 Page 1 of 3 3-1 While the larger glue traps designed to capture vertebrate animals such as rats tend to be the most problematic due to the increased likelihood to capture larger animals or multiple animals, smaller glue traps designed to capture invertebrate animals such as ants, flies, insects and cockroaches present similar dangers. …

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Sept. 9, 2024

Item 2 - August Animal Services Report original pdf

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August 2024 AUSTIN ANIMAL SERVICES REPORT 1 Animal Services News • The live outcome rate for August was 97.82%. • A total of 904 animals were brought to the shelter which included 491 cats, 357 dogs, 32 wild animals, 14 guinea pigs, 3 lizards, 2 rabbits, and 1 tortoise. • A total of 735 animals were adopted (148 adult dogs, 126 puppies, 1 neonatal puppy, 360 kittens, and 100 adult cats). • A total of 73 dogs and cats were returned to their owners (RTOs and RTO-Adopt). • On August 1, there were 1,045 dogs and cats within the ASO inventory (553 onsite, 486 in foster, 2 • On September 1, there were 892 dogs and cats within the ASO inventory (524 onsite, 364 in at a vet clinic, and 1 at TLAC). foster, 1 at a vet clinic, and 2 at TLAC). Animal Protection • Animal Protection Officers (APOs) returned 47 animals to their owners in the field. • Officers handed out 13 fencing assistance applications and implanted 1 microchip(s). • Officers impounded 139 injured animals and delivered approximately 104 wildlife animals to Austin Wildlife Rescue. • Officers entered 257 rabies exposure reports and submitted 41 specimens for rabies testing. We had 11 positive bats, 1 positive skunk, 4 decomposed bats and 2 decomposed skunks, and 1 decomposed fox. • 76 total coyote related activities (Behavior types include Sighting, Encounter, Incident, and Observation. “Observation” is defined as hearing coyotes howling and finding scat or footprints.) o 46 Wild Sick o 23 Sightings o 3 Encounters o 2 Wild Speak o 1 Observation o 1 Wild Injured • Out of 76 coyote related activities, 27 (24%) reports fell within the reported behavior types (sighting, encounter, incident, and observation) o Encounters: Pets were a factor in 3/3 (100%) of encounters reported.  An encounter involved two coyotes following caller and pet.  An encounter involved a coyote being chased by residents’ dog for 2-3 blocks.  An encounter involved a coyote with mange lunging at a dog, once the caller and dog came around the corner and startled the coyote. • Out of 76 coyote related reports, 55 (72%) reports were updated to the correct behavior types. 2 o 16 sightings updated to wild sick (Due to mange) o Residents are mistaking coyotes with mange for dogs  15 stray injured dogs updated to wild sick coyotes  3 stray roam …

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Sept. 9, 2024

Item 2 - Daily Inventory Report August 1 2024 original pdf

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Cat & Dog Inventory 8/1/2024 Total Inventory Owned Quarantine Sheltered Total 0 366 366 0 139 139 At AAC - Sheltered Only Kittens Cats Puppy Sm Dog Lrg Dog No Weig Total Kittens Cat Puppy Sm Dog Lrg Dog No Weig Total 0 71 71 2 0 1 0 7 1 0 0 0 0 30 0 30 38 30 21 28 68 0 0 0 2 1 0 1 245 0 0 245 5 7 0 0 5 0 1 3 13 72 1 66 0 67 0 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 1 3 1,042 1,045 40 7 1 2 61 402 4 9 13 14 553 3 439 442 12 18 260 0 0 1 0 7 8 0 1 1 0 26 26 0 0 0 1 3 6 1 0 1 0 0 14 0 14 2 1 131 486 133 489 121 41 12 306 Not at AAC - Sheltered Only Kitten Cat Puppy Sm Dog Lrg Dog Total Adopt Cactus Cat CK APD CK TCSO Foster No Hold Partner Quarantine Reclaim Snr Total At Vet In Foster TLAC Total Cat & Dog Intakes & Outcomes 07/31/2024 Intakes Owner Surrender Stray - ACO Stray - Citizen Total Outcomes ADOPTION Euthanasia Return to Owner TRANSFER Total Difference Kittens Cat Puppy Sm Dog Lrg Dog Others Total 2 0 0 0 2 10 4 7 25 46 6 0 3 16 25 9 1 0 5 15 2 1 1 5 9 2 0 0 0 2 0 0 0 1 1 3 0 0 0 3 0 2 2 1 5 3 0 2 0 5 0 1 1 2 4 17 1 2 5 25 Kittens Cat Puppy Sm Dog Total Kittens Cats Puppies Sm Dog Lrg Dogs Total Total -10 -7 2 0 -3 -18

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Sept. 9, 2024

Item 2 - Daily Inventory Report September 1 2024 original pdf

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Cat & Dog Inventory 9/1/2024 Total Inventory Owned Quarantine Sheltered Total 0 255 255 0 125 125 At AAC - Sheltered Only Kittens Cats Puppy Sm Dog Lrg Dog No Weig Total Kittens Cat Puppy Sm Dog Lrg Dog No Weig Total 34 34 265 0 77 77 6 0 0 0 1 7 0 1 0 0 28 0 28 0 2 2 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 1 0 2 1 891 892 31 2 6 3 36 392 8 9 10 27 524 1 412 413 15 2 0 1 4 0 6 5 0 0 2 0 20 20 3 0 0 0 2 3 1 0 2 0 0 9 0 9 1 2 112 364 114 367 24 55 5 0 0 0 0 1 0 5 165 0 0 165 2 0 6 2 5 0 2 1 22 74 1 50 0 51 90 49 11 298 Not at AAC - Sheltered Only Kitten Cat Puppy Sm Dog Lrg Dog Total Adopt Adopt-Rto Cactus Cat CK TCSO Foster No Hold Partner Quarantine Reclaim Snr Total At Vet In Foster TLAC Total Cat & Dog Intakes & Outcomes 08/31/2024 Intakes Owner Surrender Stray - ACO Stray - Citizen Total Outcomes ADOPTION Euthanasia Return to Owner TRANSFER Total Difference Kittens Cat Puppy Sm Dog Lrg Dog Others Total 1 0 0 0 1 1 2 3 6 12 0 0 0 3 3 24 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 1 1 1 0 Cat 11 24 13 0 0 0 1 1 1 0 0 0 1 0 2 3 0 5 8 0 0 1 9 0 0 0 1 1 44 1 1 1 47 Kittens Puppy Sm Dog Total Kittens Cats Puppies Sm Dog Lrg Dogs Total Total 21 12 0 4 2 39

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Sept. 9, 2024

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Sept. 9, 2024

Item 3 - Strategic Planning Update Presentation original pdf

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Strategic Planning Update to Animal Advisory Commission Stephanie Hayden-Howard, Assistant City Manager Samantha Eaton Moncayo, Business Process Consultant Senior Dr. Larry Schooler, Consultant September 9, 2024 W o r k in g Gr o u p M e e t in g • D r . Sch o o le r fa cilit a t e d s e co n d w o r k in g gr o u p m e e t in g o n Au gu s t 2 9 t h • D is co ve r y Se s s io n • P r io r it ie s d is cu s s io n Strategic Planning Update 2 Data Overview DATA METHOD Interviews Listening Sessions Public Survey Staff 9 Leadership Interviews 9 listening sessions (94 Staff) 103 total staff Volunteers 4 listening sessions 40 volunteers Community 1 month posted 2000+ responses ASO Data Analysis 09/09/2024 3 Community Survey TIMEFRAME FORMAT The community survey was open from July 17th until August 14th on Public Input. Online mixed methods survey with quantitative and qualitative questions using Public Input platform. RESPONSES 2,041 participants *567 responses excluded because they failed to complete 2 or more required questions and most other data left blank. MARKETING The survey was shared through ASO social media, a City press release, internal City newsletter, City social media, all City Public Information Officers, and a social media kit was sent to partner agencies. ASO Data Analysis 09/09/2024 4 Participant Demographics Zip Code Distribution Age Please note: Demographic questions were completed by 66%, 49%, 47% and 47% respectively ASO Data Analysis 09/09/2024 5 Participant Demographics Gender Race/Ethnicity The areas of the pie chart not visible on the graphic represent the following out of 971 respondents. America Indian or Alaska Native - 1, Hispanic, Latino, or Spanish; American Indian or Alaska Native Indian or Alaska Native; Other - 1, White; Black or African-American; American Indian or Alaska Native- 1, White; Hispanic, Latino, or Spanish; American Indian or Alaska Native Asian - 1, White; Hispanic, Latino, or Spanish; Other White; Black or African-American - 2, White; American Indian or Alaska Native - 1, White; Hispanic, Latino, or Spanish; - 2, - 1, White; Other - 1, Hispanic, Latino, or Spanish; Asian - 1, White; American - 4 ASO Data Analysis 09/09/2024 6 Participants Interactions with ASO Please note: Participants can indicate more …

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Sept. 9, 2024

Approved Minutes original pdf

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ANIMAL ADVISORY COMMISSION REGULAR MEETING MINUTES SEPTEMBER 9, 2024 The Animal Advisory Commission convened in a regular meeting on September 9, 2024, at 301 W. 2nd St in Austin, Texas. Chair Clinton called the Animal Advisory Commission Meeting to order at 6:07 p.m. Commissioners in Attendance: Ryan Clinton, Chair, Travis County Whitney Holt, D5 Sarah Huddleston, D9 Dr. Paige Nilson, D4 Lotta Smagula, D1 Commissioners in Attendance Remotely: Ann Linder, Vice Chair, D3 Beatriz Dulzaides, D2 Commissioners Absent: Nancy Nemer, Parliamentarian, Travis County Dr. Amanda Bruce, D10 Luis Herrera, D6 Laura Hoke, Mayor’s Appointee Larry Tucker, D7 PUBLIC COMMUNICATION: GENERAL Catherine Chamblee - Exacerbation and strain caused on Austin’s own stray and shelter animal population by transportation of more out of area shelter animals into Austin Remington Johnson – Enforcement of Kennel Size Pat Valls-Trelles – Process, Policy, Progress, etc. Sandra Muller – Dog Bite Scale, Live Release Rate, Austin Pets Alive! Repairs APPROVAL OF MINUTES 1 1. Approve the minutes of the Animal Advisory Commission Regular Meeting on August 12, 2024. The motion to approve the minutes from the meeting of August 12, 2024, failed on Commissioner Smagula’s motion, Commissioner Holt’s second on a 6-0 vote. Commissioner Nilson abstained. Parliamentarian Nemer, Commissioners Bruce, Herrera, Hoke, and Tucker were absent. STAFF BRIEFING 2. Staff briefing regarding monthly reports provided by the Animal Service Center. The presentation was made by Don Bland, Chief Animal Services Officer, Austin Animal Services and Jason Garza, Deputy Chief Animal Services Officer, Austin Animal Services. Commissioner Smagula requested that Animal Services staff provide information on which category the animals listed in the “Lost, Stolen, or Missing” fall under. Commissioner Dulzaides requested that Animal Services staff provide information on how many animals are microchipped each month. DISCUSSION ITEMS 3. Discussion of the Animal Services strategic plan and planning process. A presentation was made by Stephanie Hayden-Howard, Assistant City Manager; Samantha Eaton Moncayo, Business Process Consultant, Senior, Financial Services; Dr. Larry Schooler, Consultant. Commissioner Holt recused herself from the discussion. Discussion of City of Austin use of glue traps for pest control. Discussed. 4. FUTURE AGENDA ITEMS None. A motion to adjourn the meeting at 7:21 p.m. was approved on Commissioner Nilson’s motion, Commissioner Huddleston’s second on a 7-0 vote. Parliamentarian Nemer, Commissioners Bruce, Herrera, Hoke, and Tucker were absent. The minutes were approved at the October 14, 2024, meeting on Commissioner Nilson’s motion, Commissioner Holt’s second on …

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Aug. 12, 2024

Agenda original pdf

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REGULAR MEETING of the ANIMAL ADVISORY COMMISSION August 12, 2024, 6 p.m. Austin City Hall, Room 1101 301 W. 2nd St Austin, Texas 78701 Some members of the Animal Advisory Commission may be participating by videoconference. The meeting may be viewed online at: http://www.austintexas.gov/page/watch-atxn-live Public comment will be allowed in-person or remotely via telephone. Speakers may only register to speak on an item once either in-person or remotely and will be allowed up to three minutes to provide their comments. Registration no later than noon the day before the meeting is required for remote participation by telephone. To register to speak remotely, contact Eric Anderson at eric.anderson@austintexas.gov or (512) 974-2562. CURRENT COMMISSIONERS: Ryan Clinton, Chair, Travis County Nancy Nemer, Parliamentarian, Travis County Lotta Smagula, D1 Beatriz Dulzaides, D2 Ann Linder, Vice Chair, D3 Dr. Paige Nilson, D4 Whitney Holt, D5 Luis Herrera, D6 Larry Tucker, D7 Sarah Huddleston, D9 Dr. Amanda Bruce, D10 Laura Hoke, Mayor CALL TO ORDER PUBLIC COMMUNICATION: GENERAL AGENDA The first 10 speakers signed up prior to the meeting being called to order will each be allowed a three-minute allotment to address their concerns regarding items not posted on the agenda. APPROVAL OF MINUTES 1. Approve the minutes of the Animal Advisory Commission Regular Meeting on July 8, 2024. STAFF BRIEFING 2. Staff briefing regarding monthly reports provided by the Animal Service Center. DISCUSSION ITEMS 3. FUTURE AGENDA ITEMS Discussion of the Animal Services strategic plan and planning process. ADJOURNMENT The City of Austin is committed to compliance with the American with Disabilities Act. Reasonable modifications and equal access to communications will be provided upon request. Meeting locations are planned with wheelchair access. If requiring Sign Language Interpreters or alternative formats, please give notice at least 2 days (48 hours) before the meeting date. Please contact Eric Anderson, Office of (512) 974-2562 or eric.anderson@austintexas.gov for additional information; TTY users route through Relay Texas at 711. For more information on the Animal Advisory Commission, please contact Eric Anderson at (512) 974-2562 or eric.anderson@austintexas.gov. the City Clerk at

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