State of DeKalb Animals highlights $1M annual spay-and-neuter commitment and plans for 6,000 surgeries
Loading...
Summary
Speakers at the third annual State of DeKalb Animals (SOTA) described expansion of county spay-and-neuter services, voucher programs for community-cat trappers, a shelter expansion groundbreaking and community outreach, citing partnerships with Lifeline Animal Project, Paws Atlanta and others.
Aviva Hoffman of DC TV described the third annual State of DeKalb Animals (SOTA), launched in 2024 and hosted by DeKalb County District 2 Commissioner Michelle Long Spears, as an initiative to expand animal-health services and reduce shelter overcapacity.
Hoffman said the program has grown through partnerships with Lifeline Animal Project, Paws Atlanta, the Georgia Pet Coalition and the United Spay Alliance, and she credited collaborative training and free public spay/neuter clinics for recent results. "Twelve veterinarians learned advanced surgical techniques leading to two spayathons that altered 239 pets at no cost to DeKalb residents," Hoffman said.
The speaker also described a county commitment she characterized as "more than $1,000,000 each year in spay and neuter services," with plans to expand capacity to as many as 6,000 surgeries in the coming year. Those figures were reported by the presenter and were not independently verified in the presentation.
Hoffman noted additional, targeted steps to reduce community-cat populations: she said District 2 funded 436 vouchers to cover spay-and-neuter services for trappers and that advocates successfully pushed to permanently eliminate a $60 fee for those procedures. She said a local fundraising effort — described in the transcript as the "soda initiative" — raised more than $4,000 to help Paws Atlanta provide free services and space for mothers of surrendered litters.
Speakers at the event emphasized animals' roles in personal and community wellbeing. A resident who spoke about personal loss said, "My dogs have saved my life," and described how pets helped them get through grief. Another resident recounted similar experiences, saying companion animals encourage daily routine and recovery.
Hoffman also announced the groundbreaking of a shelter expansion and listed recurring outreach events — including Bark and Chill and Santa Paws — as part of efforts to connect residents to animals and promote responsible care.
The presentation named several partner organizations and local initiatives; where specific program or funding names appear as transcribed (for example, "Healthy Pets to Cab"), the article reproduces those names as provided in the presentation. Officials and presenters framed the items as progress toward reducing shelter strain and keeping pets with families. The event did not record any formal motions or votes.
Organizers said they will continue training, outreach and voucher distributions to expand access to veterinary care. The State of DeKalb Animals presentation closed with a call to community involvement and with the signer identifying herself as Aviva Hoffman, DC TV.

