Pima Acceptable Donations

Pima Acceptable Donations

Monday, April 22, 2019

Week 33 - Rescued Critters Food Drive

Hi Folks,

With 17,000 pets to care for, PACC has the right manager in the right place at the right time.
Shari Mollencopf, a volunteer, restocks bins with donated dog food at the Pima Animal Care Center. PACC staff members and volunteers make regular trips to shelters, distributing more than 600 pounds of food a week to homeless pet owners.
Photo: Mike Christy / Arizona Daily Star









This week we donated 72.2 lbs. of pet food and $75.00 in cash and one check.

See you Sunday,


Peter

Week 32 - Rescued Critters Food Drive

Hi Folks,
72 Participants x $1.00 Each x 
52 Weeks ÷ $0.90 Cost Per Pound of Pet Food = 4,333 lbs. Donated to PACC in One Year

That’s how I came up with our Miles Neighborhood PACC donation goal. Well, it turns out the formula never took into account how generous and involved in animal welfare my neighbors really are. We just finished our second full quarter and the results indicate that we will crush that proposed goal. The graphic below speaks volumes.

We are now at Week 32 with 20 more weeks to go and there are 52 participants, not 72.

In the first year of One Can A Week, we donated 9,203.5 lbs. of food to the Community Food Bank and $1,953.38 in cash. Even with fewer participants, we may match or surpass those numbers. It’s going to be fun to watch the weekly results pile up.


This week we donated two large stainless steel bowls, a huge white blanket, one small pet bed, 75.7 lbs. of pet food and $57.69 in cash and two checks.

See you Sunday,

Peter

Tuesday, April 9, 2019

Week 31 - Rescued Critters Food Drive

Hi Folks,

Two Wins for Miles Neighborhood Today


A couple of years ago, TDOT (Tucson Department of Transportation) developed, with some fanfare, a web submission form that would help speed and organize pothole repair all over the city. March 4th I submitted the form with an attached pdf listing all the potholes and adjacent home addresses. Within 24 hours I received two Repair Request numbers which meant, to me, the potholes would be fixed soon.

A day later I got an email from someone who wanted to know what direction I was driving when I made the list. My friend David said,  “You should have replied, I was driving east and hit a pothole, then I drove a little further east and hit another pothole.”

Wish he had told me that really funny idea back when I wrote my response. I was serious at the time and answered the person’s question accordingly. Then I heard nothing. In mid-March I called to check on the progress and the person assured me the supervisor was on it. Called again the next week and the supervisor was still on it.

On my early evening walks with Cody and Haley, I often run into Richard and Mary Fimbres walking their two Boston Terriers. Generally it is a hi and bye, but this particular time in late March, we stopped to chat about potholes. Richard told me to email him everything. On April 2nd, I got an email from Diana Alarcon, the Director of Transportation apologizing for the lack of details “on when they will be out to repair the pot holes.”

On Friday, April 5th, a team repaired half of Miles between Highland and Santa Rita. Strange, as was the excuse we gave them. They only paved one section at a time, this Friday it was the 1100 to 1200 block.

Today, they were back again but finished Miles all the way to Vine and then turned right (south) to fill the potholes next to my driveway.


While they were on Miles, I walked over to the crew and motioned I wanted to say something. The truck driver tooted the horn so the guys would look up. I gave them a thumbs up and shouted thank you. They shouted back, “Thanks.”

My neighbor, Mr. Aguilar was standing on his porch as I turned (south) on Highland. “It’s about time,” he shouted. I thought, you know, I don’t say anything negative to folks doing the job. It’s never about criticizing folks or displaying one’s frustration. The potholes were being fixed for my neighbors and that is all I care about.

And here's the second win ...

Notice the gold-colored coin in the plastic bag hanging off the table? That's Sacagawea. My neighbors are always surprising me. Can't wait for the postage stamp with the upside down bi-plane. But I'll keep that surprise to myself.

We donated a small dog sweater, a large bed sheet, 53.4 lbs. of pet food and $61.75 in cash and two checks.

See you Sunday,


Peter

Week 30 - Rescued Critters Food Drive

Hi Folks,

Second quarter results are in

Sunday was the end of our second quarter and the totals are really surprising. We have donated nearly 80% of our annual goal of 4,333 lbs. of pet food and we have 22 more weeks to go. So we’re crushing it, as they say.

Take a moment to review the numbers below. You will see that consistency is the key to our success. There are a few strong weeks, but the average weekly donation patters really add up.


We’re having fun now.


See you Sunday,

Peter

Tuesday, March 26, 2019

Week 29 - Rescued Critters Food Drive

Hi Folks,
PACC Opens the Door
to a Better Neighborhood

After talking pointedly about Pima Animal Care Center and the needs of their 17,000 charges for the past 28 week, suddenly lots of simmering ideas in the neighborhood came to life this weekend. Folks were now conversing with me about cleaning allies and turning one into a butterfly sanctuary, free spay and neuter clinics, clearing walkways beside two large homes and planting African Daisies in the gardens of three other homes.


Then Betsy on 13th Street and her son, Ed told me about a social entrepreneurship grant they are writing to fund a tree planting program throughout the Miles Neighborhood. I told them I would gladly introduce them to all the neighbors … for them, the most difficult aspect of their program … but so easy for me.

Well, none of the conversations were really just talk. By Monday noon all three allies were cleaned and ready for a brisk weed-whacking. That will happen Tuesday. 


For years I have been talking about clean allies so I cleaned my alley. That stopped my immediate neighbors from tossing stuff over the walls. I also requested those big green roll offs every six months. Again, nary a word from anyone, but the roll offs always left the neighborhood nearly filled to the brim. When it came to folks placing huge items like stoves or mattresses wherever or whenever they pleased, I quietly took care of those.

What suddenly changed? It has to be PACC and the joy folks feel inside when they donate every week to feed the dogs and cats and rabbits. That warm feeling took 28 weeks to ware down their protective shields to a point where they could say, “Hey, I need a little help with something that bugs me.” But the best part is they are now staying connected and continue to help right back.

Imagine if one person in each of the 130 neighborhoods in Tucson started to collect donations for Pima Animal Care Center. This would be one fine community service city in 28 weeks. And no hungry rescues anywhere.


We donated lots of leashes, food bowls, harnesses, collars, a Smurf hat, 42.6 lbs. of pet food and $58.90 in cash and two checks.

See you Sunday,


Peter

Tuesday, March 19, 2019

Week 28 - Rescued Critters Food Drive

Hi Folks,
Seven Envelopes and a $2.00 Bill

It really was a lucky St. Paddy’s Day Sunday. About halfway through my route, white envelopes started to appear in a number of screen doors. That meant no one was home but they didn’t forget about PACC and our food drive.

Normally, only two neighbors have an envelope with their donation waiting for me. I put a check mark on the envelope in lieu of the Thank You card, and place it back in the door. Sunday there were five more envelopes which create a little excitement when I got home.  

It’s like lots of presents for PACC. The disassembled envelopes show the lack of patience with the sticky-seal.

The best surprise was a $2.00 bill which I had not encountered in a while. The associate at PACC who logs our weekly donation, told me that when she was a kid, she would get $2.00 bills and never spend them. “I wish I could do
that with $20.00 bills,” I said. She smiled and agreed.

This week we donated 44.6 lbs. of pet food, 4 pill bottles and $81.04 in cash and two checks.

See you Sunday,

Peter

Monday, March 11, 2019

Week 27 - Rescued Critters Food Drive


Hi Folks,

African Daises                          30 lbs. of Cat Food

Lots of people know Armando, but more know about and are intrigued by his prolific African Daisy garden which covers the corner of S. Highland Avenue and E. 13th Street every spring and summer. This year, for some reason, those colorful flowers have spread across the street and way down the block. And now they have a stronghold in my alley between Highland and Vine because I planted more than a score of seedlings last year.

My friend Steve who lives on the corner of S. Vine and 13th Street asked me in January to help him start his own garden of African Daisies. To oblige, I gave him a planter box with 50 seedlings which he promptly planted.

The weather has not been pleasant for the past two month but fortunately these daisies are quite hardy and Steve’s garden took hold. So much so he was motivated to return the favor and give me a 30 lb. bag of cat food for PACC.

A week earlier my friend Marci, who lives on E. 12th Street above S. Cherry, asked me about the African Daisies because she walks her Boston Terrier through my alley now and again. Well, this past Sunday, I gave her a bunch of seeds and planted a couple of thriving plants outside her front door. And more seedlings are on the way to her if we can ever get the sun to hang around.

If anyone else would like to start your own African Daisy garden just let me know. In about a week I will have at least 80 seedling to give away. In fact, I can even help you plant them which is a very simple task.

The care and feeding of African Daisies is as easy as caring for a Pet Rock, if you remember those days. Plant the seedlings, water lightly now and again and just stand back to watch them grow … slowly at first. At the end of the season, you tear out the dead flowers and then early next spring you will observe seedlings growing all by themselves. It really is that easy.

So when you see me on Sunday, let’s talk Daisies in the Miles Neighborhood. I know you will be as pleased as Steve and that is really good for PACC.


Daisies Make the Difference


This week we donated 45.4 lbs. of pet food, 5 bullies sticks, a bag of soft chews and $61.25 in cash and one check.

See you Sunday,

Peter