Friday, November 12, 2010

Murrells Inlet shelter clinic cuts costs for vet care

MURRELLS INLET -- Following a trail of blue, orange and white balloons tied to trees on a dirt road in Murrells Inlet, dozens of people came to Coastal Animal Rescue on Thursday to celebrate the opening of its veterinary clinic.

They said the clinic, which opened Sept. 27, is something for both the community and the organization to celebrate.

"There were rumors in the spring about a clinic and then in September it opened," said volunteer Karen Nierengarten. "Today, there is just so much excitement."

Nierengarten said the clinic came about because there was an "overwhelming need to make [veterinary care] affordable for people."

The organization's goals include finding homes for rescued cats and dogs, preventing pet overpopulation and educating people about responsible pet ownership.

The clinic offers low-cost animal care, with basic exams starting at $32 and neutering or spaying costing $115 at the most.

Nierengarten said the organization tries to teach people how to care for their animals, but "when you make it affordable, people are more likely to actually do it."

But the clinic doesn't just benefit the community.

It promotes Coastal Animal Rescue's mission, draws people to its off-the-beaten-track location and helps the rescue stay solvent.

Shelter director Sue Wurm said before the clinic opened, sick animals had to be taken to nearby veterinarians, and rarely at discounted prices.

"Now we just take it to Dr. Mok and it's done," she said. "It's wonderful."

Meisen Mok is the clinic veterinarian and the rescue's first paid employee. He moved from Loveland, Colo., to work at the clinic.

Mok walked around Thursday's lunchtime event with a name-tag that simply said "Doc," answering questions and talking to people about their pets.

He said he is glad to work where the focus is on animals rather than profits.

"Veterinaries can be very profit-based," he said, "but pet care is generally based on disposable income."

Mok said he has seen a general national trend of animal care costs increasing, and "there's just so much that people can afford."

And when people don't feel like they can afford a shot or a check-up for their pet "they're probably going to drop that level of care," especially in this economy, he said.

Mok was laid off from his previous job at a clinic in Colorado because of the recession.

But in the around six weeks the vet clinic has been open, he said, it has been "very, very busy."

Two other employees have been hired for the clinic since Mok arrived.

"It seems like it just sort of took off," he said.

That's good news for the organization, Nierengarten said.

Animal welfare programs for the Murrells Inlet organization are funded through private donations and, while Nierengarten said the public provides "great support," at fundraisers, "we never have enough money."

But now "any profit we make [at the clinic] after the salaries and benefits can go back to the care of the animals" in the rescue, she said.

Showing a profit would provide a much-needed cushion for the organization in case donations drop off.

Just this past week, another area animal shelter, the Grand Strand Humane Society in Myrtle Beach, had to implement an animal drop-off fee and ask the city for its quarterly funding check to keep the shelter going.

The new clinic is "win-win" Mok said.

"It gives the public another option and is great for the shelter," he said.

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