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Operating A Pet Food Pantry

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Presentation on theme: "Operating A Pet Food Pantry"— Presentation transcript:

1 Operating A Pet Food Pantry

2 F.I.D.O. = Friends of Indianapolis Dogs Outside
Animal outreach 501(c)3 organization. Mission: To improve the quality of life of outside dogs. Formed in 2005 to address unmet needs of outside dogs. Pet Food Pantry was an unmet need.

3 How It All Started with FIDO:
FIDO delivered dog food during outreach home visits. Free dog food served as a great ice-breaker and incentive for cooperation with FIDO programs. However, routine food delivery became an expectation. Thus, the FIDO Pet Food Pantry came to pass.

4 What You Need to Start a PFP:
A large storage building, warehouse, garage, etc. Ample parking. A large supply of donated dry food: box store distribution center returns (Kroger, Wal-Mart, etc.) Vehicles to pick up pallets of food from donation site. Volunteers to prepare food. Event day volunteers to register clients and distribute food. Spay/Neuter resources to offer.

5 Food Prep Work: We accept any dry dog or cat food donated.
Most of our food supply is obtained through “food rescue”. We receive a wide variety of brands and qualities. We never obtain enough donated cat food and need to buy a portion.

6 Food Prep Work: Use 96-gal roll bins to mix food.
Dry Dog Food Supply: mix higher quality with lower quality. Dry Cat Food Supply: mix 70% cat and 30% grain-free/small bite dog food. Examine food for defects while mixing. We prep ~8,000 lb dog and ~3,000 lb cat for each monthly event.

7 Our Clientele Low-income dog owners. Low-income cat owners.
Community cat caretakers. Volunteer feeders with community cat program. Many of our clients are seniors or disabled.

8 Event Day: 1st Saturday of each month 10 am - 4 pm.
Clients form line into building. No pets allowed. Pay $1 nominal fee. Bring photo ID. Bring empty, clean food buckets.

9 New Client Registration
Photo ID. Record client contact info. Record pet info. Discuss if and how dogs are kept outside. Proof of financial need. Proof of pets’ S/N or schedule S/N Liability waiver.

10 Returning Client Registration:
Photo ID. Update any changes in client info. Update any changes in pet info. Check on compliance with S/N. Adding new pets is against policy.

11 Food Distribution: Dog Food Chart: Based on combined weights of dogs:
(Supplemental, Not Total Needed) Based on combined weights of dogs: 0 – 15 lb weight = 10 lb food 16 – 50 lb weight = 20 lb food 51 – 75 lb weight = 30 lb food 76 or more weight = 40 lb food

12 Cat Food Chart: (Supplemental, Not Total Needed)
Food Distribution: Cat Food Chart: (Supplemental, Not Total Needed) 1 - 5 cat = 5 lb cats = 10 lb 11 – 15 cats = 20 lb 15 or more cats = 30 lb

13 Points to Ponder: We typically give everyone at least a one-time-pass.
If in doubt, give food, then ask questions. We use standard low-income criteria, with a lot of leeway. Number of clients will increase over time due to word-of-mouth. Consider adding other basic supplies at a nominal fee, such as cat litter, canned food, flea treatment, etc.

14 It’s a Lotta Work but a Lotta Reward
Provides strong incentive for spay/neuter. Helps keep animals fed and in the home. Helps Good Samaritans care for community cats. Offers a venue for humane education. Offers a venue for other basic supplies at nominal fees. Most clients are very appreciative.


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