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Rescue charity marks 73,500 animals rehomed milestone
Summary
The Celia Hammond Animal Trust says it has rehomed more than 73,500 animals since its 1986 founding and provides low-cost veterinary and neutering services across London and the South East.
Content
The Celia Hammond Animal Trust reports it has rehomed over 73,500 animals since the charity was founded in 1986. The organisation operates centres in Canning Town and Lewisham and a sanctuary in Brede, East Sussex, and works across London and the South East. It also runs low-cost neutering clinics and says it has neutered more than 450,000 pets and strays. The trust responds to calls from local authorities, police and the public and rehomes around 1,900 animals each year.
Key facts:
- The trust was founded in 1986 by Celia Hammond and focuses on dogs and cats in London and the South East.
- The charity reports more than 73,500 animals rehomed to date and about 1,900 rehomed annually.
- It operates centres in Canning Town and Lewisham and a sanctuary in Brede, East Sussex, covering several surrounding counties.
- The trust says it has neutered over 450,000 pets and strays and opened low-cost clinics in Lewisham (1995) and Canning Town (1999).
- The organisation has begun building a new rescue and rehoming centre in Lewisham and is seeking funds for phase 2B, the main two-storey facility, at a reported cost of £495,749; phases 1 and 2A were funded through legacy gifts.
Summary:
The milestone underscores the trust's long-running rehoming and neutering activity across the region and notes increasing demand linked to an unneutered cat population. The trust is progressing construction of a new Lewisham centre and is seeking funding for phase 2B while earlier phases have been funded.
