Saturday, October 13, 2012

New Hope Pit Bull Rescue Is Closed

It was brought to our attention recently that there is a new rescue group in South Carolina (West Columbia area) called "New Hope Pit Rescue". This is **NOT** New Hope Pit Bull Rescue and has **NO** affiliation to NHPBR which was run by Kat Riley and Alicia Domina.

New Hope Pit Bull Rescue is **NO LONGER OPERATING** or soliciting donations. Please do **NOT** be confused by this new group.

When we asked the new rescue to clarify that their group is not New Hope Pit Bull Rescue, we were met with opposition and defensiveness and they informed us that they may also purchase our old domain name (www.nhpbr.org). We tell you this because we want (or hope) to avoid any further confusion.  If the old web address becomes live again, it is not us.

Our old blog is still up and full of information about  NHPBR, as well as educational resources and links to other great rescues and resources.

New Hope Pit Bull Rescue - Original Blog

We also want to remind everyone that when you are interested in volunteering with any rescue, you should check them out as thoroughly as any adopter or foster home should be checked out. Here's a post we put on our original blog regarding checking a rescues references. We hope you find it helpful.
http://nhpbr.blogspot.com/2008/07/friendly-advice-about-checking-rescue.html

Thursday, July 24, 2008


Friendly Advice About Checking Rescue References

This info actually came from a yahoo group (Pit-Bull-Crusaders) that we are a member of, but we thought it was great info to share with with anyone looking to place a dog with a rescue, looking to adopt from a rescue or even those people interested in volunteering a the rescue.

If the rescue hesitates to provide references, ask yourself, "Why?"

What to Ask For?:

1) Vet Reference(s)-----> Is this a new vet for them? If so, ask for the name of the one they used before. Some people move because of bad rescue practices which could indicate substandard veterinarian care for their animals.
2) Have they filed paperwork with their local government to be recognized as a non-profit organization? Verify it.
3) Local Shelter reference and number
4) Local Animal Control and number
5) At least (2) adoptive homes that the rescue has adopted to
6) Local rescue group(s) that they have worked with on any level

There are many more things you can ask about beyond this list. What is important to you? Who might have that answer? How well does the rescue know their chosen breed? Are the animals handled and placed appropriately? We've heard some pretty disheartening stories regarding the outcome of animals who were not managed appropriately and were set up to fail.

Keep in mind too that sometimes a rescue's references may not tell the whole story about who they are as a group. We've heard stories about people who are engaging in unethical treatment of their animals, but they are good friends with Animal Control who overlooks it. We've also heard of another rescue that is notorious for abandoning animals in their foster home. I don't know WHY any rescue would want to treat a foster home that way, but it happens!

You can call a vet to see if they see their animals, but do you have proof that ALL of their animals are being seen there? (I'm of the personal opinion that a dog should at least be seen by the primary vet for a health checkup, even if all the procedures were done at a separate location). I've heard stories from people about adopting a dog only to realize it had NEVER seen a vet while in the rescue's care. That's absolutely frightening! Get those vet records BEFORE you adopt!

The point to all of this is to not settle for one good answer. Get as many answers and opinions as possible!

And yes, we are inviting any of you to check us out :) You can email us at info@nhpbr.org. If you have thing else you think is pertinent to this blog post, let us know that too!

Thank you everyone!