




Stray cat found in Dorchester tested positive for rabies.
From our friends at Boston Animal Control click here.
For media story click here.
Do you have an interest in becoming more active with ACOAM? We would love to have you join our team! ACOAM is actively looking for more County Reps to help represent the specific needs and voices of our members across the 14 counties in Massachusetts. If you are interested, please reach out to ACOAM President Joe Chague at jchague@cityofpittsfield.org.
The Wildlife Rehabilitators’ Association of Massachusetts (WRAM) has put together species specific pamphlets for Massachusetts wildlife. These pamphlets include some natural history, guidelines for assessing the age of an animal, some common scenarios and how to deal with them, some resources, and some clarity on common issues.
Richard “Dick” Stein was the town of Canton’s Animal Control Officer for over 30 years, and he was a founding member of the Animal Control Officers Association of Massachusetts in 1980. With the creation of ACOAM he became a driving force in the move to educate and professionalize the officers in this much joked about and maligned job. Dick was there for the inception of the ACOAM certification course and he helped mold the course into one of the most in -depth educational opportunities available to animal control officers anywhere in the United States.
Dick served as President of ACOAM and later held other board positions as well. In 1995 the Animal Rescue League of Boston and the Massachusetts Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals honored Dick with the prestigious ACO of the Year award which he richly deserved.
His years of effort to build respect for his chosen profession helped create the recognition that ACOAM has today with local and state government. ACOs who never met Dick Stein will benefit from his efforts on behalf of the organization that he helped to create, and from the tone that he set that has helped to bring Animal Control from the image of the lowly, cartoon-ish, dogcatcher to a respected branch of public safety officer.
This scholarship is offered as a thank you and a memorial to honor the years that Dick Stein devoted to the Animal Control Officers Association of Massachusetts, and his contribution to the certification academy offered by the organization that he helped create.
Check out Find a Wildlife Rehabilitator – A webpage that was just released by Mass Fish and Wildlife on July 30, 2019.
The new page contains updated information within the text, a new table, and most importantly a new map feature. The map allows a user to enter their location (either town or full address) to find rehabilitators closest to them, which eliminates the guessing game of trying to figure out where you are relative to the towns of the wildlife rehabilitators listed in the old table. There is a small embedded map as well as a full screen view, and the zoom extent of the map is restricted to protect the privacy of the wildlife rehabilitators.
There is a legend of the symbols used to easily identify which rehabilitators accept the various categories of animals, and this information is also contained within the pop-up box for each rehabber, along with their contact information.
Please keep in mind that wildlife rehabilitators are not authorized to rehabilitate Endangered, Threatened, or Special Concern species protected under MESA. Wildlife rehabilitators are also not authorized to rehabilitate venomous snakes, black bears, moose, or white-tailed deer. Additionally, any issues related to injured coyote, bobcat, fisher, river otter, and beaver should be referred directly to MassWildlife.
Click here to view the ACOAM Newsletter. Want the most current newsletter? Click here to become an ACOAM member!
The attached brochure is from the Massachusetts Office on Disability and provides guidance on service animals in places that are open to the public.

The Animal Rescue League of Boston and the Massachusetts Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals are pleased to announce that nominations are now being accepted for the annual Massachusetts Animal Control Officer (ACO) of the Year award.
The award was established to honor an animal control officer whose efforts in his/her local community throughout the year have promoted responsible pet ownership by:
Nominations should be submitted in writing and may come from government officials, other officers, animal protection organizations, or private citizens.
Submissions should explain how the nominee has met the above criteria and should be sent to both:
Alan Borgal
Animal Rescue League of Boston
10 Chandler Street
Boston, MA 02116
aborgal@arlboston.org
Kara Holmquist
MSPCA
350 South Huntington Avenue
Boston, MA 02130
kholmquist@mspca.org
The deadline for nominations is September 24th, 2019.
