You can also call ARF if you are having a problem with your pet and need advice or if you need low-cost spay/neuter information.Īnimal Rescue Force has 1 adoption center and 1 display center on the weekends! For more information on these locations click here! If you need a home for your pet call our office during the week at 73, and you will learn about our procedure. Donations are tax deductible to the fullest extent allowable by law. We are not funded by the town or government and rely on donations and fund raising events run by volunteers as means of support. Thank you from ARF and the cats and dogs waiting for their forever homes.Īnimal Rescue Force is a private, non-profit 501c3 organization established in 1974 to find responsible homes for dogs and cats and to encourage all dog and cat owners to spay and neuter their pets. You can donate by credit card and see our adoptable pets by visiting our website, check out our social media for updates and photos of our adoptable pets at We at Animal Rescue Force wish you and your fur kids all a wonderful holiday season and a happy, healthy New Year. It’s because of your donations that dogs like Yardie were able to get the vet care needed and find the loving home she deserves in her golden years. As we move towards the holidays, we ask once again for your generosity in helping us care for these pets awaiting homes. Now, more than ever, the animals need us. While there is still a lot of uncertainty, we know that we need to adapt fast to our ever-changing reality. Taking care of the seniors is costly and many of the ones that have come through need medical tests, dentals and/or other procedures. Yardie came in as a stray to a local shelter, Animal Rescue Force took her in and found out she was approximately 12 years old, testing eventually showed she had bladder cancer. Also, inflation has caused our vet bills to go up and this is also causing people to give up their elderly pets that they just can’t afford to give the care needed. However, we have seen new sets of obstacles as people are going back to work, more and more cats and dogs are being given up. We have started to get some fundraisers up and running again, such as bagging at ShopRite, local fairs, can shaking and our annual Tricky Tray. Our adoption centers have gone back to allowing walk-ins, instead of just scheduling appointments. After two years of living the pandemic life, we have finally come back to some normalcy.
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