Monday, September 14, 2009

PetProject Help Feed our Pets HallieQ.Brown

Kibble with a cause fills Fido's bowl





It's a sign of the times. A fledgling project to create pet food shelves is taking root in Minnesota.

Last update: September 13, 2009 - 12:21 AM

Kim Carrier drove up to the donation entrance of a St. Paul food shelf this week in a car piled high with bags of dog food. Her unusual gift reflects her unusual mission: to create Minnesota's first network of pet food shelves.

"I sometimes work at a pet supply store, and people laid off would call and ask if there is any place to get free pet food,'' said Carrier, of Minneapolis.

"I Googled and never found anything,'' she said. "So I decided to try to do something myself, and then a lot of other people jumped on board.''

Carrier launched the Pet Project in July. It's part of a fledgling movement nationally to make sure people don't have to choose between keeping food in the kitchen or Fido in the living room.

With more than 200,000 Minnesotans laid over the past year, plus the elderly and disabled on fixed incomes, the pool of Minnesotans who could benefit is enormous, said Carrier.

But to date, pet food donations have been limited to sporadic drives by charities, pet food stores or humane societies, said local humane societies.

"It's great that people do fundraisers a couple times a year, but your dog or cat needs to eat all year,'' said Carrier, who on this day dropped off 500 pounds of pet food at the Hallie Q. Brown Community Center food shelf in St. Paul.

"I want to make pet food easy to find and

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