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Austin animal commission hears December shelter metrics, discusses pneumovirus response and $200,000 emergency care funding
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Summary
Staff reported 644 impounds in December, a 94.98% live outcome rate, and that four lab-confirmed pneumovirus cases prompted temporary adoption and foster restrictions; commissioners were briefed on a $200,000 emergency-care funding arrangement and an ongoing competitive vendor process.
Chair Nelson opened the Austin Animal Advisory Commission meeting on Jan. 12 at Austin City Hall, where staff presented December shelter statistics and described changes to intake and medical response after a contagious canine pneumovirus.
Jason Garza, speaking for Austin Animal Services, said the shelter recorded 644 impounded animals in December, of which 627 were companion animals, and reported a 94.98% live outcome rate for the month. Garza said 389 animals were adopted during the month, 68 animals were reclaimed, and 22 animals died in shelter care; the monthly report also listed vaccinations, spay/neuter and foster-care counts.
Rolando Fernandez, interim director, and other staff told commissioners the shelter had restricted adoptions and foster placements during the outbreak to households without resident dogs and limited in-person public interactions to reduce spread; those restrictions were later lifted as conditions improved. In response to a commissioner question, Fernandez said laboratory testing confirmed four positive pneumovirus cases among shelter specimens.
Fernandez also described a change to the emergency-care scope of work: the city has allocated an additional $100,000 to bring available emergency-care funding to $200,000 to cover triage and pain management. Under the interim arrangement, Good Samaritans may transport animals to the emergency clinic for triage and overnight stabilizing care; if the finder cannot cover after-hours costs the city will pay and APOs will pick up animals the next morning. Fernandez said the city is still conducting a competitive procurement to select a contracted emergency clinic vendor and is operating on the current scope of work without a finalized contract.
Commissioners asked for more detailed invoicing and utilization reporting from the emergency clinic once a vendor contract is in place; staff said the future contract will require monthly reports to clarify what services are provided and how funds are spent. Commissioners also requested a year-to-date inventory report and more granular age cutoffs in tables that separate kittens from cats and puppies from dogs.
The commission did not take formal policy action on shelter operations at the meeting; commissioners thanked staff for the quick disease response and for reformatting the monthly report to follow city-code reporting requirements. The meeting adjourned after additional agenda items and public comment.
