Monday, March 18, 2013
Shelby Township officials say an animal foster care operation in Forest Glen subdivision violates township ordinance. The operator continues to work with officials to resolve this issue and avoid shutdown.
Thursday, March 14, 2013
As of Wednesday, Kelley LaBonty, president of Detroit Animal Welfare Group, had not applied to appear at the April 4 Zoning Board of Appeals' meeting to make her case for home-based animal foster care.
It’s been just over a month since officials first told Kelley LaBonty to cease fostering dogs at her Shelby Township home, but the issue remains far from resolved. LaBonty, who serves as president of the nonprofit Detroit Animal Welfare Group, says she has fostered dogs in her home since October 2011. In February, the president of the Forest Glen Homeowners Association brought the number of dogs in LaBonty’s care, almost a dozen including her own four, to the attention of the township’s board of trustees. The issue at that point was liability, specifically who would be held responsible should one of the dogs get loose and injure someone in the neighborhood. For Shelby Township officials, the issue is zoning. Township Planning Director …
Sunday, February 24, 2013
Shelby Township officials say a local dog rescue and foster care operation in Forest Glen subdivision violates township ordinance.
Does a home-based animal rescue operation have a place in Shelby Township? Township officials say no, which is news for Kelley LaBonty, who has operated the nonprofit Detroit Animal Welfare Group out of her home in the Forest Glen subdivision for the past 10 years. A registered nurse, LaBonty serves as president of DAWG and fosters multiple animals at any given time in addition to her own four dogs. In January, Shelby Township notified LaBonty that her operation was in violation of township zoning ordinances, as an animal rescue is "not a permitted use" in a residential area, according to The Macomb Daily. A second letter was sent the first week of February, which ordered LaBonty to remove the fosters she had and cease operating the rescue…
Monday, May 23, 2011
Gov. Rick Snyder administered the oath of office on May 23 to nearly 300 new child welfare workers who will be assigned to offices in Macomb, Oakland and Wayne counties.
Gov. Rick Snyder swore in 300 new child welfare workers Monday who will be assigned to offices in Macomb, Oakland, Wayne and other Department of Human Services offices across Michigan. The ceremony at Club Venetian Banquet Hall in Madison Heights follows one of the largest hirings of child welfare workers in the history of the department, and will help reduce the caseload for each worker, officials said. "We have to prioritize what are our most important things, and the most important item we have in our state is our children and we have been failing those children in many respects," said Snyder of the need to provide job and educational opportunities for children along with helping those who are most vulnerable. "All of your jobs are …
Shelby Paint & Decorating
11:47 am on Monday, March 18, 2013
As a resident of Shelby Twp., I also run a foster/rescue and have zero problems with my neighbors because a great set up. Fosters/Rescues have a secured dog pen that separates them from the rest of the yard and they are the free to run with supervision. I'd be happy to provided Kelley with some guidance on how to keep the peace and continue saving the animals that our society considers disposable…   more ›