Shelter employee placed
on administrative leave
This is
from the Rushville Republican -
12/4
Shelter employee placed
on administrative
leave
The controversy surrounding
the Rushville Animal Shelter just got hotter.
Friday evening, shelter whistleblower Jamie Glandon was
placed on administrative leave with pay.
“She was placed on leave just like
Jack Hill was, with pay,” city attorney Julie Newhouse said.
“The investigator really wanted a clear field with no one down
there, to take a look at shelter with neither Jack nor Jamie,
so he could investigate.”
In the meantime, a hodgepodge of
individuals, including Mayor Bob Bridges, city councilman
Darrin McGowan, assistant chief of police Tim Williams and Dr.
Fred Phillips and staff have been manning the day-to-day
operations of the shelter, which has been at a standstill since
last week.
The team have been feeding and
watering animals, cleaning kennels and scooping litterboxes
following a chain reaction of events which surfaced last
Wednesday, leading to the paid suspension of both animal
control officer Jack Hill and assistant Glandon.
The suspensions came on the heels
of Glandon’s discovery of a puppy that had supposedly been
euthanized, alive in a freezer full of dead animals. According
to Glandon, incidents similar to this had happened twice
before, except the animals involved were re-euthanized and not
pulled from the freezer.
Glandon said she blew the whistle
on her own shelter because she felt that things were being
swept under the rug and that she, as well as the mistreated
animals, were not being taken seriously. It was election time,
Glandon said, and any controversies arising just before weren’t
given proper attention — with the promise of being remedied
after the votes had been tallied.
The city disputes this claim,
stating that investigations, done properly, take time and that
any and all concerns brought forward by Glandon were addressed
immediately, including training at a local veterinarian’s
office to show how to properly administer euthanasia to an
animal via a vein.
Glandon said that late Friday
afternoon RPD investigator Mark Mathews asked her to leave the
shelter so that they could continue their investigation, and
that they would call her when done.
At 3:20 p.m. she went to the
mayor’s office to ask when she could get back into the shelter
because she had work to do before the weekend, and she said she
was told to be at the shelter at 3:40 p.m. Once there, she was
met by Williams, who told her she was being placed on
administrative leave. Her keys to the shelter and her
city-issued truck were taken. She was then informed that she
was not to be anywhere near the shelter without a uniformed
officer escorting her.
“I asked him then if I could come
in as a volunteer to take care of the animals if an officer was
there with me,” Glandon said. “I was told that if I was needed
I would be called.”
Glandon said she then took Williams
around the shelter and gave him a rundown on the animals,
including an overview on animals there that had “special
needs,” cleaning procedures, and which animals could be handled
versus which couldn’t.
“I also asked about animals that I
had going into rescue, which was approximately seven, and was
told that all shelter operations have ceased, and until the
investigation was complete the animals were staying,” Glandon
said.
The city is requesting that Gabby,
the German Shepherd-Mastiff puppy pulled from the freezer, be
brought to Rushville to be examined by an independent
veterinarian.
“I was devastated when they placed
me on leave because, as a volunteer, I have spent a lot of time
and money going back and forth from the shelter to
Indianapolis,” Glandon said. “I didn’t take the job for pay, I
took it for the animals. I would give up my entire paycheck to
go down there and take care of them instead of leaving it up to
people who have better things to do, like protect and serve our
community.”
Since the shelter’s closing,
Glandon reports that calls have been received from rescue
groups all over the United States, offering to pull every
animal that is in the shelter now to keep the police department
from having to use their time and energy to care for the
animals, but the city is reportedly refusing.
Newhouse reports that the
investigation is slated to be completed in the next 24 to 48
hours, and a press release on the situation will be issued at
that point.
“This has been an extremely
devastating situation for everyone involved,” she said. “We’re
really ready to put this all behind us and hopefully reach a
resolution.”
Comments are welcome and can be left on
the blog - Euthanized Dog Found Four Days Later
Alive in Freezer - Petition
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