Paradise Animal Shelter primed for expansion – Paradise Post

PARADISE — No day is a quiet day when Mollie St John arrives at work. As animal control supervisor for the town of Paradise, with one officer position filled and another vacant, she has a lot to do in her compact office just off the lobby. On top of the phone ringing and her walkie talkie squawking, she also hears the intermittent barking of dogs echoing through the cinder block building.

The Paradise Animal Shelter dates to 1981. It survived the Camp Fire, as much by luck as construction, but it’s more than showing its age. Quarters are cramped: The cat room is a glorified closet, with one of its long — relatively speaking — walls devoted to storage shelves, and more often than she’d like, temporary crates in the hallway of dog kennels place canines and felines in close proximity.

That should change, though, perhaps as soon as next year. The town and the facility’s biggest booster — the nonprofit group Paradise Animal Shelter Helpers, or PASH — are partnering on an expansion that would create an area dedicated to cats, among other improvements. Town councilors allocated $600,000 to the project, which happens to match the amount raised by PASH in a fundraiser with a goal of $1 million, and at Tuesday’s council meeting expressed support for additional funding if needed once a final bid is accepted.

That’s good news for St John, in her sixth year with Animal Control including a year as supervisor, and her boss, Paradise Police Chief Eric Reinbold — as well as residents on the ridge and beyond. Paradise cooperates with shelters in Chico and Oroville, taking in pets from neighboring communities as space allows. The expansion will double the capacity for cats.

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