Richmond no-kill rescue facing criticism regarding care of sick kittens
Briefly

"Here they are," said volunteer Tina Spagnoli while holding up the two kittens, Bravo and Echo, she had been fostering at the time of the interview. She says she and Milo employees have been sounding the alarm to founder and director Lynne Tingle. "That was just new to me that a rescue would not respond appropriately or do whatever it takes to make sure that the animals in their care stay alive," said Spagnoli.
Milo's founder and director, Lynne Tingle denies this though and gave ABC7 News a tour of the Milo Foundation and answered questions about the kittens. "Three-week-old kittens, two-week-old kittens, sick five-week-old kittens - they're vulnerable," said Tingle.
We start them on the antibiotics, we clean their eyes, we give them meds and if they aren't improving then it's time to go to the vet, we don't take them to the vet on day one unless it's a life-threatening condition," said Tingle.
Read at ABC7 San Francisco
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