About Us

Together, we are forging a brighter better and more humane tomorrow for homeless pets and our community.

With the support of our community, PAWS has spayed or neutered more than 30,000 domestic felines its TNR Program began in early 2004.

Together, we are forging a brighter, better and more humane tomorrow for homeless pets and our community.

We are an all-volunteer, 501(c)3 organization that receives no government funding.

Founded in 1979, PAWS is a no-kill animal rescue and spay/neuter group dedicated to saving the lives of companion animals through spaying and neutering, pet fostering and adoption, and educational efforts.

Strategies:

  •     Facilitating the spaying and neutering of owned and unowned animals.
  •     Rescuing, fostering, and finding permanent homes for stray, abused, abandoned and otherwise homeless animals.
  •     Collaboration with other humane organizations.
  •     Raising awareness of the plight of homeless animals and ways in which individuals can reduce overpopulation.

PAWS aspires to best practices established by well-respected organizations such as Best Friends, Alley Cat Allies, Neighborhood Cats, Feral Cat Spay/Neuter Project, and Best Friends’ No More Homeless Pets movement, and understanding what the No Kill Movement is all about – and how it relates to PAWS which subscribes to the No Kill Philosophy, please visit the following – and do some research on their sites, sign up for their newsletters:

PAWS is an all-volunteer 501(c)3 non-profit organization established in 1979, focusing on spay/neuter, foster/adoption and humane-education programs to save the lives of abused, abandoned or otherwise homeless dogs and cats throughout south-central Pennsylvania. It serves eight counties in the region with a local presence and local volunteers in Adams, Cumberland, Dauphin, Franklin, Lancaster, Lebanon, Perry and York counties. Its efforts include no-cost Trap Neuter Return (TNR) clinics, a reduced-fee spay/neuter program for companion animals, rescue and re-homing of needy animals, emergency medical treatment for injured or ill homeless animals,and a broad humane education program through local events and schools.