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MILWAUKEE — Officials at the Wisconsin Humane Society (WHS) and Kenosha’s Safe Harbor
Humane Society (SHHS), also known as the Kenosha County Humane Society, are excited to
announce that SHHS has chosen to strengthen their work for animals and families by
becoming a part of the Wisconsin Humane Society.
“Nonprofit animal shelters operate with limited resources, and it is even more difficult because
every organization is separate and has to individually fund their overhead costs,” said Alison
Fotsch Kleibor, president and CEO of WHS. “By consolidating both organizations’ experience
and resources, we can not only strengthen our efforts, but also provide a better return on
investment for the communities that support this critical work for animals.”
WHS was approached in the fall of 2022 by leadership at SHHS about ways to ensure the
continuation of animal sheltering and other services in the Kenosha community. SHHS faced
economic challenges that threatened the future of their work. WHS will bring efficiencies and
innovative approaches to ensure that service to animals and families continues uninterrupted
in the Kenosha community. The two organizations have worked together over the past
several months to solidify plans for the acquisition.
“This is truly the best thing that could have happened for the Safe Harbor Humane Society,”
said Bill Bohlman, SHHS’s board president. “In the end, the animals win, the staff win, the
community wins. The resources and stability that WHS can bring to the region will strengthen
our ability to serve animals in need.”
Service to new communities is not foreign to WHS. This acquisition marks the fifth organization
that has approached the Milwaukee-based organization to explore a merger. In 2004, WHS
acquired the Ozaukee Humane Society, and in 2013, it acquired the Countryside Humane
Society in Racine. Both the Bay Area Humane Society in Green Bay and the Door County
Humane Society became part of WHS in 2018.
“As Wisconsin’s oldest animal welfare organization, WHS has always worked to identify and
respond to the most pressing needs of animals,” said Fotsch Kleibor. “Today, the
fragmentation of animal welfare into so many different organizations has created a new
need: the need to support vital work for animals with strong, simple infrastructure. We’ve seen
first-hand how local organizations face significant risks to sustainability when each one is a
separate silo that must reinvent every wheel.”
Both WHS and SHHS were already committed to finding a home for every treatable and safe
animal, no matter how long it takes, and this approach will continue under the new
partnership. In addition, the organizations expect that this acquisition will bring more
resources for medical and behavioral care to animals in Kenosha County.
The organizations are working jointly to make the transition as smooth as possible for their
dedicated staff and volunteers. Amanda Cutler will serve as the shelter director of what will
soon be called the Wisconsin Humane Society Kenosha Campus; she is the current Executive
Director of SHHS and has been with the organization for 11 years. WHS will also be hiring new
positions to support the expanded work. As was in the case with all WHS’s prior acquisitions,
there are no plans to lay off staff or reduce pay.
“We have so much to look forward to – a partner that can offer everything from best
practices in shelter medicine, to health insurance and benefits for our staff, to innovative
approaches to adoption,” said Cutler.
The boards of both organizations voted unanimously in April to approve the acquisition of
Safe Harbor by WHS, pending final stages of due diligence, including agreements with
municipalities as well as satisfactory title reports on real estate. WHS hopes to close the
transaction as early as May 31.
“We are incredibly grateful for the vital work Safe Harbor does for 3,000 animals and their
families every year in Kenosha County,” said Fotsch Kleibor, “and we are excited to pool our
resources to sustain lifesaving services for animals and the people who love them.”
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