Home / Dallas News / Where do Frisco city council candidates stand on a stand-alone city animal shelter? We asked

Where do Frisco city council candidates stand on a stand-alone city animal shelter? We asked

It comes as a surprise to some that Frisco, with a population of 200,000 and the fastest-growing city in the U.S., does not have a city animal shelter.

Five of Frisco’s six neighboring cities — Allen, The Colony, Little Elm, McKinney and Plano — have a shelter inside their city limits. Prosper does not.

Instead, Frisco has a contract with Collin County Animal Services to handle the city’s stray and missing pets through 2023, requiring pet owners to drive about 20 minutes east to McKinney to pick up missing animals that have been found.

Hava Johnston, Laura Rummel and Dan Stricklin — candidates for Frisco City Council Place 5 — have listed animals and pets as a priority issue on their campaign website or The Dallas Morning News voter guide.

Hava Johnston

She has said she wants to help form an animal advisory board to work alongside the animal services department. The board would collaborate with multiple city departments and the school district to build an animal rescue and education center.

Laura Rummel

Rummel has said she wants to focus on providing education on pet ownership; having clinics for spaying, neutering and microchipping pets; and eventually opening a city animal shelter to help relieve capacity issues at Collin County’s shelter.

Dan Stricklin

His platform focuses on opening a 72-hour holding facility.

We asked the rest of the seven city council candidates, as well as Mayor Jeff Cheney, if they believed a city animal shelter was needed. Their responses are below.

Mayor Jeff Cheney

The incumbent and unopposed Cheney said he is satisfied with the contract the city has with Collin County.

Additionally, he said he believes Frisco’s animal control division does a “wonderful job” returning pets to their homes before even needing to be transferred to the shelter in McKinney.

However, he said the city council will review how these services are provided as the city continues to grow.

Ruan Mientjes

The Place 5 candidate said a public-private partnership would be the most viable option for a city shelter when it is necessary.

Rob Cox

Cox also said a public-private partnership would be the direction to go in when a city shelter is necessary. He said it is not financially feasible for the city to pay for facilities, staff members and an on-site veterinarian, as there are not enough pets transferred to the Collin County animal shelter.

In 2019, 432 pets headed to the shelter from Frisco, while Plano’s shelter saw nearly 6,000 pets, based on data obtained from Frisco Pets Project — an organization focused on opening a shelter in Frisco.

Cox also said nothing shows that a Frisco holding facility or city shelter would provide better care for animals. Instead, he wants to be proactive by educating residents on microchipping and filling the two open animal services positions that have opened since COVID-19 hit. He also wants to add a place on the city website to post photos of missing animals that could be shared on city social media accounts.

“Volumes will dictate [a need for change],” Cox said.

Cox said he would support a charitable organization serving in an advisory capacity regarding the need for a shelter, but he believes a more formal committee is not necessary.

Place 5 candidates

Ram Majji

The candidate said he is open to discussing solutions for a short-term shelter.

Check Also

Police remove pro-Palestine protestors from UT Dallas encampment, 20 arrests made

It seems like your message is about the ongoing protests and demonstrations related to the …