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Find similar grantsFund is active but currently has a hold on new owned animal voucher requests due to lack of funds; no application deadline provided.
Homeless Animal Prevention and Care Fund (Massachusetts Animal Fund) is sponsored by Massachusetts Department of Agricultural Resources (MDAR). This opportunity supports mission-aligned projects and measurable outcomes.
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Massachusetts Animal Fund • MSPCA-Angell Give a pet the home they deserve. Find yours today. Pay It Forward Adoption Fund Help us find homes for more animals by subsidizing adoption fees!
Donate animal care items to our Adoption Centers!
24/7 Emergency & Critical Care Avian and Exotic Medicine 24/7 Emergency and Critical Care Avian and Exotic Medicine Surgery and Dental Services Veterinary Clinic for Low-Income Pet Owners and the General Public Discounted Services for Low-Income Clients Low-Cost Community Clinics What to Expect – Angell Boston Client Rights and Responsibilities Payments / Financial Assistance Grief Support / Counseling Helpful “How-to” Pet Care Referring Veterinarian Portal Partners in Care Newsletter CE, Internships & Alumni Info Animal Training & Behavior View all of our rewards-based training classes available.
We offer several low-cost spay/neuter programs to reduce overpopulation. We provide affordable and accessible animal care resources to families in underserved communities. What is it like to work for the MSPCA-Angell?
See our current job openings and apply. Check out the benefits we offer our employees. Other Ways to Donate Tribute, Memorial, or Honor Giving MSPCA-Angell Headquarters 350 South Huntington Avenue, Boston, MA 02130 Angell Animal Medical Centers – Boston 350 South Huntington Avenue, Boston, MA 02130 angellquestions@angell.
org 293 Second Avenue, Waltham, MA 02451 For on-site assistance (check-ins and pick-ups): angellquestions@angell.
org 565 Maple Street, Danvers, MA 01923 Animal Care and Adoption Centers – Boston 350 South Huntington Avenue, Boston, MA 02130 Animal Care and Adoption Centers – Cape Cod 1577 Falmouth Road, Centerville, MA 02632 Animal Care and Adoption Centers – Nevins Farm 400 Broadway, Methuen, MA 01844 Animal Care and Adoption Centers – Northeast Animal Shelter 347 Highland Ave.
, Salem, MA 01970 From an online gift to a charitable gift annuity, your contribution will have a significant impact in the lives of thousands of animals. Massachusetts Animal Fund S. 639 : An Act to provide additional funding for animal welfare and safety programming Sponsor: Senator Mark Montigny Status: Referred to Joint Committee on Environment and Natural Resources .
Hearing held 10/21/2025. Reported favorably by committee and referred to the committee on Senate Ways and Means . The Homeless Animal Prevention and Care Fund, administered by the Massachusetts Department of Agricultural Resources (MDAR), provides spay, neuter, and vaccination services to Massachusetts animals in need.
This includes not only homeless dogs and cats but also those living with families who cannot afford these crucial health services. The Mass Animal Fund also facilitates the training of animal control officers in every city and town. The stability of the Fund is in the most precarious place it has been in since its inception in 2012.
Several months ago, due to lack of funds, a hold was placed on new owned animal voucher requests for spay/neuter vouchers. For people who submitted a voucher before this hold, there is still a years long wait list. While the monies collected via this bill would not be enough to provide services to all the families and animals in need, it would help.
This bill would require administrative fines issued pursuant to Section 37 of Chapter 129 (“Enforcement actions; jurisdiction of commissioner of agriculture, district and superior courts”) to be deposited in the Massachusetts Animal Fund. We expect that this would amount to an additional $30-40,000 each year.
The Fund’s voucher program spends, on average, $150 per sterilization surgery with vaccinations; this increase in funding would allow the program to help an additional 200 – 270 dogs and cats per year. The Fund not only helps pet owners: all Massachusetts residents benefit when the number of homeless animals is reduced. Funds that would be spent housing and caring for animals in municipal animal control facilities are decreased.
Research shows that intact dogs are more likely to bite than altered dogs; therefore, a reduction in dog bites is possible through spaying and neutering. Additionally, spaying and neutering helps prevent unwanted behaviors in dogs such as roaming and aggression; by decreasing these behaviors, public safety is increased. The Massachusetts Animal Fund was created by the legislature in 2012.
Animal homelessness is a problem that causes animals’ lives to be lost to euthanasia, poses a public safety concern, and costs taxpayer money to pay for services for stray, abandoned, and feral animals and their offspring. Sterilization of animals decreases not only the number of homeless and feral animals born each year, but it can also decrease unwanted behavior in owned animals, including roaming and aggression.
The Fund works towards preventing animal homelessness by: Offsetting costs of vaccination, spaying, and neutering of homeless cats and dogs; Offsetting costs of vaccination, spaying, and neutering of dogs and cats owned by low-income residents; Assisting with the training of animal control officers consistent with section 151C of Chapter 140.
This Fund benefits YOUR community — 86% of the Commonwealth’s municipalities participated in the program by requesting vouchers through their local animal control officer (ACO) for residents who have no other opportunity to provide their animal with sterilization or vaccination services.
As much as the Fund benefits animals, it benefits residents too, by reducing the number of homeless animals and associated costs for communities that would pick up, care for, and house them. It is estimated that for every $1 spent on spay/neuter, a community saves $3.
The authorizing language for the Massachusetts Animal Fund also established training opportunities and support for Massachusetts animal control officers (ACOs) so they can better serve their communities and provide uniform enforcement of animal control laws.
The Core Competencies Training Program began in 2016 and, since then, hundreds of ACOs have been brought up to date on animal laws in Massachusetts, emergency preparedness, animal behavior and safe handling, communication, officer safety, and report writing and record keeping. The Fund is primarily funded by the voluntary tax check off (Line 33f) on the Massachusetts resident income tax form.
However, the current income from Line 33f is not enough to provide the needed services to pets and homeless animals. MSPCA-Angell works hard to get funding for the Fund included in the Massachusetts State Budget each year, by advocating in the House and Senate budgets.
To date, the Fund has disseminated funds across the Commonwealth for spay/neuter surgeries and vaccinations; this includes cats/dogs in municipal care, cats/dogs owned by low-income residents, and feral cats.
In addition, the Fund has helped with emergency assistance to help municipalities deal with situations such as animal hoarding, large scale abuse and neglect cases, and disease outbreak — helping thousands of additional cats and dogs in dire situations. Learn more about the Fund on the state’s website.
| Website design by Accomplish a Boston Web Design Agency The MSPCA-Angell is a 501(C)(3) Nonprofit registered in the US under EIN: 04-2103597.
Based on current listing details, eligibility includes: Homeless dogs and cats, dogs and cats owned by low-income Massachusetts residents, and feral cats. Animal control officers may apply for community/feral cat vouchers. Applicants should confirm final requirements in the official notice before submission.
Current published award information indicates ~$150 per sterilization surgery with vaccinations Always verify allowable costs, matching requirements, and funding caps directly in the sponsor documentation.
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Stewardship Assistance and Restoration on APRs (SARA) is a grant from the Massachusetts Department of Agricultural Resources that funds restoration of inactive or underutilized Agricultural Preservation Restriction (APR) farmland. Eligible projects include land restoration, soil and water management, agricultural access improvements, site remediation, and pasture and cropland rehabilitation. Reimbursement grants of up to $50,000 are available, with applicants required to provide a cash match of at least 15% of total project costs. Eligible applicants must be located in Massachusetts and own or operate a commercial agricultural business on MDAR APR-protected land. The application deadline is April 14, 2026 at 4:00 PM. Contracts are anticipated to begin in Fall 2026 and run through June 30, 2027.
Farm Viability Enhancement Program (FVEP) is sponsored by Massachusetts Department of Agricultural Resources (MDAR). This program provides business planning, technical assistance, and grants to help sustain active commercial farming on land protected through MDAR's Agricultural Preservation Restriction (APR) program. Grant funds may be offered for identified farm improvement projects in return for signing an agricultural covenant.