Foothills Animal Center opens doors, hearts at fairgrounds site

The first clients at Foothills Animal Center in the adoption lobby area.

The first clients at Foothills Animal Center in the adoption lobby area.

JEFFERSON COUNTY – Table Mountain Animal Center is no more; Foothills Animal Center is open.

And the change apparently sits well with the critters.

The new facility, on the northwestern corner of the Jefferson County Fairgrounds, opened its doors to the public Wednesday, unveiling a state-of-the-art animal care center to replace the aging Table Mountain facility, which was built nearly 34 years ago as a traditional dog pound.

AdoptCatBut the move seems to have gone easier for the animals – most of which seemed relaxed – in their new, more spacious setting – than the still-scurrying staff who were attending to the animals, the unpacking and the loose ends that settling into a new place seems to bring.

“I am trying to settle the ark,” said Heather Cameron, Chief Executive Officer of the new center, which – at 30,000 square feet – is twice the size of the Table Mountain facility.

The expanded space allows the center to provide improved living quarters for stray, abandoned and surrendered animals as well as more comfortable and animal-friendly viewing and adoption areas as well as improved areas for volunteer training programs and public education.

The difference between the two shelters already is evident in the animals, which are adapting well to the larger enclosures, many of which have three levels instead of the flat cages of the former shelter. The enclosures also provide a private area where the animals can escape the almost constant daytime that bustles around them.

Prescious

Prescious is the center's longest resident.

Dogs have an area of their own and the smaller canines have a special corner called “Tiny Town” where the lap-size dogs and puppies can lounge away from larger, more imposing dogs.

The cat area houses groups of cats – such as those confiscated from “hoarders” or felines from the same former home – in large “colony areas” until they are adopted. The cat area also has two- and three-cat enclosures as well as single, two-level enclosures with out-of-sight private areas for lone cats not yet ready to join the larger groups in more spacious group areas.

It also includes a 2,000 square-foot surgery clinic with a spay and neuter clinic. The clinic also will implant microchips that help ensure a pet’s safe return home.

“It’s not a full-service vet clinic,” Strickland said. “We will be more efficient at providing the low-cost services that we have been providing” including dog licenses.

The center also has six outside exercise runs for the dogs, a separate intake entrance, an adoption lobby and spacious areas where humans and critters can get to know each other.

And then there’s the “Critter Corner” for the miscellaneous pets such as rabbits, gerbils, hamsters and iguanas

The old facility housed as many as 10,000 animals a year, and about 1,200 of those are less traditional pets, those Jennifer Strickland, the center’s Community Relations manager calls “the other guys.” They also are up for adoption, Strickland said, urging would-be pet owners to consider them, as well.

The aging Table Mountain enter, the second largest animal shelter in the metro area, outlived its design years ago and, in its last years, failed to meet the state’s standards for animal care centers.

A former director described Table Mountain as “not much more than a warehouse” that spread stress and illness among the animals housed there.

He cited the former shelter’s poor ventilation and overcrowding that fed the spread of upper respiratory diseases, ensuring that nearly every animal that entered the shelter’s doors would become easy prey to airborne viruses.

That no longer is the case, Cameron said. The news center is designed to meet the physical and psychological needs of the animals it serves. The ventilation system replenishes the air 14 to 22 times an hour. The window-filled space enlarges the animals’ world and comfortable raised sleeping beds made by a volunteer keep them comfortable. Soundproofing keeps cats from hearing the dogs and vice-versa. Some enclosures have separate temperature controls, allowing reptiles to be kept warm while the gerbils in the adjacent area can be cooler.

“All of this building has intention to it, every piece of it and every piece of equipment we have,” Cameron said. “This is built for the animals and it’s built for the community to come and find their animals, adopt their animals and to help the community get basic health care for their animals.”

After years of examining TMAC’s needs and shortcomings as well as the cost of replacing it, Jefferson County Commissioners in 2009 announced a plan to pay for the $9.7 million project.

The county is providing $3 million for the project and is leasing the Fairgrounds site to the shelter for $1 a year. The county’s cities and towns, which take confiscated and stray animals to the shelter, will forego their respective shares of countywide dog license fees, allowing that revenue to be used to retire $5.2 million in Certificates of Participation that will be issued and marketed by the county.

The dog licensing fees are expected to bring in $625,000 this year and, by 2011, are expected to increase to $732,000, according to Carla Zananti, Jefferson County’s Animal Control manager.

As part of the financing the Table Mountain Animal Center Foundation hopes to raise another $1.7 million for the project and an endowment fund for operation of the center.

Two grand opening events are scheduled for Aug. 28, a daytime event for the general public and a VIP Event that evening.

The first event will offer interactive public tours of the Foothills Center. Live music, face painting, food, giveaways and a raffle.

The evening event, from 5 p.m. to 10 p.m. will be at The Mathews Collection, a private car collection and event center at 5889 Lamar St., Arvada. The cost is $150 and guests get food and entertainment and can participate in silent and live auctions featuring original art, luxury vacations and other items.

For more information contact the center at (720) 407-5224.

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