Note:Another good place questioned by neighbors.
thanks
Lauren Merryfield,
editor/publisher,
CATLINES
http://www.catliness.com
Dear Member:
Below is an announcement from Angel's Gate, an amazing hospice facility for animals on Long Island, NY. Susan Marino is the founder of this organization,
and is one of our long-time members. She has been providing this loving care to the animals for 13 years, in the same location, and is now under fire from
two of her neighbors across the street from her to leave the promises if she continues this work. Although there have been no official complaints ever
made or violations recorded, those two neighbors are trying to make this a NIMBY (Not In My Back Yard) issue. Please read the notice below, and step in
and help Susan keep her facility where it has been for so long. We ask that you send your protest to
www.smithtowninfo.com
Scroll to the bottom and click on Contact Us. Then type in your message to the Town Supervisor, Patrick Vecchio, and register your advocacy. The message
box is small, but you can type as much as you feel you want to.
Thank you for your support for Susan and Victor in their selfless and wonderful work. For more about her organization go to
http://www.angelsgate.org/
You will be glad to see all that is being done for so many poor, discarded and sick animals – who now have a new lease on life – with great care and love.
Warm regards,
Ellie Waldron
President, APLB
FROM VICTOR AT ANGEL'S GATE:
Friends of Angel's Gate,
As some of you know a few of our neighbors are trying to force us out of our home, if not close us down completly. What follows is a News Letter sent out
to subscribers of Eye On The Hamptons, which covers significant events on Long Island.
Please read it and please send e-mails and letters to the appropriate authorities. We'd love a copy, too.
EYE ON THE HAMPTONS
FRONT PAGE
Holding Hospice Hostage
Right now, the only animal hospice on Long Island is under emotional siege. Some of Angel's Gate Animal Hospice's neighbors in Ft. Salonga want it shut
down or, unpacked elsewhere. It does not matter that they moved into their house several years after Angel's Gate started, they want it gone from their
sight. They took their complaint to Town Hall in Smithtown two weeks ago (see Commentary).
In an informal phone conversation with Eye on Monday, Town Board member Patricia Biancaniello said, "It's a tough issue. Everyone is grappling with it.
Her (Susan Marino) motives are very, very good. I just have real concerns about whether you can have that many animals in a house." Having said that,
Ms. Biancaniello added that town representatives have visited Angel's Gate any number of times in the last thirteen years without ever finding that the
non-profit organization has broken even one town statute.
Life at Angel's Gate begins every morning at 6 a.m. With time out at 1:30 for a sit-down hot meal every day of the week, the floors are scrubbed, the walls
are cleaned, the cages are refreshed, the animals are fed, the dogs are walked. At 3, Angel's Gate welcomes visitors.
The lunch hour is important at Angel's Gate, especially for children, said Susan Marino. "That is when we can share our thoughts and feelings and grieve
together over the loss of an animal." It is a cathartic time, especially for the child volunteers who, though they may live in another town, are part
of the hospice's network of volunteers during school vacation time throughout the year. "We try to teach them that it is alright to grieve and to express
their feelings. They get very attached to particular animals. They must be able to work through that loss."
Even very young children come to work alongside their mothers on weekends. They may wash windows, pick up towels, rake leaves, spend quality time talking
to a cat, brushing a dog, or just being a comforting friend to one of the animals. Summer and winter, children commit vacation time to Angel's Gate.
A first-time visitor may be surprised to see a volunteer snuggled up to a dog, catching a little pretend sleep or, find a dog paddling around the swimming
pool with Ms. Marino right beside him - hydrotherapy is a regular part of animal care. The pool house shelters the cats with feline leukemia and the tennis
court may be rife with tennis balls but the court has become the dog run.
Asked once why she was doing this hard, hard time-consuming work, Ms. Marino, a registered nurse with over 30 years experience in critical care for children,
replied, "Not doing it would be a lot more difficult."
In her work, Ms. Marino is raising public awareness to the acute need of bestowing all animals with love and dignity throughout their lives, not only when
they are young and healthy.
Angel's Gate, an Affiliate member of The Mayor's Alliance of New York, is living testament that animals can approach the final stages of life in a caring
and loving environment.
Below is an open letter from Kimberly Sorino who lives a short distance away from Angel's Gate:
Dear Friends,
Some of you know that there is a small group of neighbors surrounding Angel's Gate Animal Hospice in Fort Salonga, NY who are trying to close them down.
This is not news, as there have been complaints in the past but to no avail. However, now this group is taking it to the next level by hiring an attorney
and trying to pursue legal action. Angel's Gate has always maintained an open door policy and has been inspected, interviewed, observed, and/or been paid
surprise visits by the Department of Health, Department of Public Safety, Buildings Department, Animal Control, The ASPCA, and the Smithtown Town Attorney,
and have been found in no violation of any wrong doing. In fact, founder Susan Marino won the ASPCA Founders Award in 2003 for her work with animals.
Since all else has failed, this small faction of the neighborhood is now trying to claim that Angel's Gate is running as a "business" when in fact it is
a nonprofit providing the only services of it's kind on Long Island. Among those supporting the hospice is the remaining majority of Angel's Gate neighbors.
Now Sue, Victor and their incredible staff caring for the sick, injured, homeless, and terminally ill animals need our help.
Donate to Angel's Gate. Contributions will help those animals in need and support the continued operation of the animal hospice. Go to http://www.angelsgate.org/.htm
and click on "Make A Donation." Your contribution is tax-deductible and will be greatly appreciated especially at this time.
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