Post by francenefrayer on Oct 20, 2020 7:21:05 GMT
Information provided for pet owners by the Federal Emergency Management Agency Easy Cellar Review presents guidelines to follow before the disaster occurs as you prepare to take care of your pets, what actions to take during the actual disaster and procedures to follow after the event has occurred. During the article the writer continually stresses that the owner should avoid leaving the pet behind whenever it is possible. Rather then desert their loving pet to fend for them selves the owner could with the appropriate strategy and preparations gear up to address this predicament prior to the actual time of crisis being encountered. It doesn't matter if the calamity is a wild fire, flood or hurricane the animals are habitually the final item of preparation that is contemplated.
I found the data interesting in that even though a federal law mandates that pets be taken into consideration for emergency shelters the article stated that most shelters still fail to accept the animals even in 2010, several years after passage of the PET Act. In the rather lengthy research report entitled, "An epidemiological study of public and animal health consequences of pet ownership in a disaster: The January 1997 flood of Yuba County, California", Sebastian Eugen Heath established a de facto standard for documenting animal studies as they relate to a crisis environment.
Do you know where your family pet is at this moment? Is he in the living room sound asleep on the carpet or perhaps she's enjoying the evening playing joyfully with one of the children. Most responsible pet owners usually know exactly where their dog or cat is at any moment of time. Unfortunately, all pets are not as fortunate as that particularly during times of crisis. This problem has become an increasingly complex issue with far reaching resolutions hinging upon major court decisions resolving ownership of pets after a disaster.
healthreviewfactory.com/easy-cellar-review/
I found the data interesting in that even though a federal law mandates that pets be taken into consideration for emergency shelters the article stated that most shelters still fail to accept the animals even in 2010, several years after passage of the PET Act. In the rather lengthy research report entitled, "An epidemiological study of public and animal health consequences of pet ownership in a disaster: The January 1997 flood of Yuba County, California", Sebastian Eugen Heath established a de facto standard for documenting animal studies as they relate to a crisis environment.
Do you know where your family pet is at this moment? Is he in the living room sound asleep on the carpet or perhaps she's enjoying the evening playing joyfully with one of the children. Most responsible pet owners usually know exactly where their dog or cat is at any moment of time. Unfortunately, all pets are not as fortunate as that particularly during times of crisis. This problem has become an increasingly complex issue with far reaching resolutions hinging upon major court decisions resolving ownership of pets after a disaster.
healthreviewfactory.com/easy-cellar-review/