FOTAS Fido Fixers Program: Combatting Overpopulation of Unwanted Animals

FOTAS is all about improving the quality of life for the animals in the Aiken County Animal Shelter, increasing the adoptability of the shelter residents and of going the extra mile to find every adoptable animal a home—and it’s worked.

In only eleven short years, the FOTAS/County public/private partnership, coupled with the commitment of you, the Aiken community, has achieved our highest goal: for the past two years, every adoptable animal has been adopted into responsible, loving homes.

That’s right: every adoptable animal. Even during the Covid-19 pandemic. Thank you for helping us make that happen.

But we do more than work on the demand side of the equation—we also work on the supply side to reduce the overpopulation of unwanted pets (and thus the number of animals consigned to the shelter). FOTAS supplements the County’s spay/neuter voucher program, which provides vouchers for citizens who need financial assistance to fix their pets. That program has been so successful that spay/neuter surgeries are sometimes booked two months out, making it hard to get an appointment.

Chestnut, like all of the ACAS’s adoptable pets, is already fixed to reduce overpopulation of stray pets in Aiken County.

Now we’ve added another weapon in our arsenal to combat animal overpopulation. Last year, FOTAS teamed up with Fido Fixers, a group from the Columbia Humane Society that travels all over the state in a mobile clinic offering low-cost spay/neuter surgeries. Colleen Timmerman, one of our board members and long-term FOTAS volunteer, organizes and schedules Fido Fixer events to provide affordable and convenient spay/neuter service in the Graniteville, Langley, Bath, and Clearwater areas.

Generally, FOTAS schedules 20-25 surgeries per month; if someone calls and the schedule is full for that month, they get moved to the next month’s schedule. And here’s the best part: FOTAS pays the full cost for those surgeries.

Our success in reducing overpopulation has been slow but steady over the past decade. Prior to 2009, the old shelter took in over 6000 animals per year. Last year the number was slightly north of 4000/year, which is still way too many.

There is only way to reduce the number of homeless animals, and that is: every single pet owner must spay or neuter their pets. No exceptions. Why would anyone add more unwanted puppies to the thousands of unwanted, homeless, abused, and neglected animals in the county? When there are so many healthy, wonderful animals in the shelter system just waiting to be loved?

Fido Fixers helps folks who need financial and other assistance to spay/neuter their pets. FOTAS pays for all of the surgeries done for County citizens at these monthly events.

Beats me. It makes no sense, particularly when FOTAS and the County have ways to help folks with the spay/neuter voucher and the Fido Fixer program.

So, please, fix your pets! Urge your family, friends, and neighbors to fix their pets, too. Think of all the misery that can be prevented. Think of all the taxpayer dollars used to care for those homeless animals that can be used for other purposes, like, say, public parks, better roads, play yards for schools—you name it.

For more information about the County’s spay/neuter voucher program or Fido Fixer, please call the County Shelter at (803) 642-1537 or the FOTAS Hotline at (803) 514-4313. Alternatively, you can email us at info@fotasaiken.com.

Their lives are in our hands.

— By Joanna D. Samson, FOTAS Vice President