Crime & Safety

Pet Scanner Donated to Andover Animal Control

The Massachusetts Animal Coalition and a Hopkinton drug company donated a device that will help the Andover animal control officer find lost pets.

This was provided by the Massachusetts Animal Coalition.

In an effort to help bring lost pets home, Hopkinton Drug (Hopkinton, MA) and the Massachusetts Animal Coalition (MAC) donated a microchip scanner to Andover Animal Control Officer (ACO) Wayne Nader.

“I am very grateful for the generosity of Hopkinton Drug and MAC. This will definitely help me do the important work I do,” states ACO Nader

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About the size of a grain of rice, microchips have been implanted in animals for years and offer a permanent unique registration number that cannot be altered or removed.

Since October 31st ACOs in Massachusetts are required to scan stray animals for a microchip as part of a new law updating animal control statutes.

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“We think this is a perfect opportunity to highlight the importance of microchipping and to play a role in helping to get this technology to our ACOs. From experience, we have learned that microchipping offers a more reliable, quicker and more efficient way of helping to reunite more pets with their families,” states Anne Lindsay, founder of MAC.

HomeAgain is one of several companies offering microchips and scanners. Owners register their pets on a central database and, if the animal is lost, a veterinarian, shelter or animal control department representative can scan the animal. Once the chip is detected, the ACO can contact the microchip company and obtain the owner’s information. The donated scanners are able to read chips manufactured by other companies, in addition to its own.

The scanner donation is due, in part, to a grant to MAC from the “Hopkinton Drug Fund for Massachusetts Animal Shelters” program: for every veterinary prescription filled at Hopkinton Drug, money is set aside and disbursed to benefit local animal shelters and rescues. This generous grant provides valuable services to animals in need. The other portion of the scanner donation is made possible by the MAC disaster fund. “We think that disaster preparedness is important. If we have a disaster, such as last year’s Western Mass. tornado or are hit harder by a Hurricane like Sandy, microchip technology can be key to reuniting pets with owners” noted Lindsay.

MAC and Hopkinton Drug have donated dozens of scanners to Massachusetts ACOs. 


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