Alachua County commissioners were briefed on animal-resources developments, including the resumption of shelter adoptions following a nearly five-week quarantine for a canine distemper exposure, and a staff commitment to develop revised standard operating procedures (SOPs).
Why it matters: Staff said quarantine and emergency response saved roughly 150 dogs, though four animals did not survive. The board previously allocated more than $2 million in the budget to begin acquiring land and funding preliminary engineering for a new shelter.
Mark Sexton reported on shelter operations and noted staff and volunteers led a successful quarantine response. Commissioners praised staff and family members who organized the courthouse renaming ceremony in a separate agenda item.
County manager staff said they will deliver a revised SOP package within 90 days for board review, and plan to fill multiple department vacancies; staff also proposed forming an advisory board to provide stakeholder review of SOPs and future facility planning. Commissioners favored creating an advisory body composed of local experts (for example, representatives from the UF veterinary school, Humane Society and other community partners) and asked staff to return with a recommended makeup and timeline in about 60–90 days.
What’s next: Staff will finalize SOPs, fill key vacancies and return to the board with a plan for an animal-resources advisory board and for next steps toward a new shelter.