Basic Organization Information
Critter Crossings Corp
- Physical Address:
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Los Molinos, CA
96055
- EIN:
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20-4269918
- Web URL:
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www.crittercrossings...
- NTEE Category:
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D Animal related
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D01 Alliance/Advocacy Organizations
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D Animal related
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D12 Fund Raising and/or Fund Distribution
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D Animal related
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D99 Animal Related Activities N.E.C.
- Year Founded:
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2006
- Ruling Year:
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2006
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Mission Statement
What makes Critter Crossings special, and gaining recognition amongst the rescue community, is our ability to see the incredible potential in every dog. We specialize in dogs that are considered hard to place - senior dogs, sick or injured dogs, dogs that lack basic training or socialization, dogs with shelter stress, or dogs that sometimes just plain smell bad. The dogs that we take may not seem like the most logical choices of animals to rescue, but at the core of our vision is the ability to see potential, where others see an undeniable fate; euthanasia. We see the injured, matted, mangy, despondent, old, broken, blind, deaf, and sometimes both dogs, and we know that these dogs are worthy and wonderful. With love, time and care, each dog is given the chance to become adoptable. We are a rescue?s rescue. We are the safety net for dogs without hope, who otherwise would meet their end without a family to call their own. These special needs dogs are our passion.
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Leadership
Mrs. Julie Klingsberg
Profile:
Critter Crossings was founded in March 2004 by our president, Julie Klingsberg, who began her rescue experience by fostering other dogs for local rescues; Pit Bull Rescue, Bichons & Buddies and San Diego Pet Rescue. Her first rescue of her own was a 6 year old Great Dane left at Fallbrook Animal Hospital because "they got new floors". This dog was in her care for nearly three months until a committed home could be found but once adopted, she went to the Humane Society and adopted an 8 year old Bernese Mountain Dog who had severe kennel stress, so much so that his paws and back end were chewed to bloody and his tail had a constant injury that bled due to being in such close quarters. And so it began, one dog at a time, until she realized she could do so much more by reaching out to the community for help.
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