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Journal Article

Citation

Glassey S. Animals (Basel) 2018; 8(4): e8040047.

Affiliation

Public Safety Institute of New Zealand, P.O. Box 216, Wellington 6140, New Zealand. steve@publicsafety.institute.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2018, Molecular Diversity Preservation International)

DOI

10.3390/ani8040047

PMID

29601478

Abstract

The aftermath of Hurricane Katrina in 2005 became the genesis of animal emergency management and created significant reforms in the US particularly the passage of the Pets Emergency and Transportation Standards Act in 2006 that required state and local emergency management arrangements to be pet- and service animal-inclusive. More than a decade later Hurricane Harvey struck the Gulf states with all 68 directly related deaths occurring in the state of Texas. In this study, six key officials involved in the response underwent a semi-structured interview to investigate the impact of the PETS Act on preparedness and response. Though the results have limitations due to the low sample size, it was found that the PETS Act and the lessons of Hurricane Katrina had contributed to a positive cultural shift to including pets (companion animals) in emergency response. However, there was a general theme that plans required under the PETS Act were under-developed and many of the animal response lessons from previous emergencies remain unresolved. The study also observed the first empirical case of disaster hoarding which highlights the need for animal law enforcement agencies to be active in emergency response.


Language: en

Keywords

Hurricane Harvey; animals; disasters; hoarding

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