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Get ready for a glamorous night out with a cause! Join us Friday, December 12, 2025 at the Springfield Elks for Designer Purrrse Bingo, an unforgettable evening benefiting the animals in need at the Foundation for TJO Animals. Doors open at 6:00 PM, the first game starts at 6:45 PM — and trust us, this is not your grandma’s bingo.

✨ What’s in store:

Each ticket includes a 10-game packet & dabber to mark your cards.

NEW this year: two designer bags per round—double the fun, double the stakes!

Featuring an exclusive Louis Vuitton Bonus Game (purse lovers, this one’s for you).

Door prizes, raffles, refreshments, and a cash bar to toast your wins.

Plus an Adopt & Rescue Bag Raffle Table — score a stylish statement piece, while supporting rescue efforts.

🎤 Emceed by Leah Rantz of Lazer 99.3 — bringing the energy, the laughs, and maybe a few surprises.

💵 Price info & extras:

Tickets: $50 each

Want to bring your friends? Grab a table for 10 seats for $450

Add-ons: more bingo packets, extra cards, special game cards (including that LV game) all available

Come for the purses. Stay for the paws. Help animals get the care they deserve. Let’s make it a night to remember — stylish, fun, and full of heart.

*If you’re interested in being an event sponsor, please contact [email protected]. We are still looking for our Partner sponsor, which features a full program add, table signs and more!

Our longest-running fundraiser is back for year 18-the holiday Pawzaar!

This craft fair will feature 30-40 local vendors selling their hand-made products, a donation-only bake sale and drinks, over 30 raffles including a scratch ticket Christmas wreath worth over $200, and discounted pet merchandise for sale from TJO! Enjoy holiday music while shopping and snacking!

This event is run by the Foundation for TJO Animals, a 501c3 nonprofit that raises funds that provide resources and support for critical veterinary care and enrichment for the animals at the Thomas J O’Connor Animal Control and Adoption Center serving Springfield, Chicopee and Holyoke.

Join us on Saturday, November 8th from 10am to 3pm at 52 Sumner in Springfield for some festive fun-all to raise money for the animals at TJO!

Opinion

Editorial

 

Second Chance Animal Services calls it a “trifecta of challenges that demand immediate attention.”

First, a rising tide of inflation has led to food insecurity for both people and their furry companions, as the cost of pet-care essentials skyrockets. Housing costs, too, are soaring, forcing families to make wrenching decisions about their living situations, often resulting in the surrender of beloved pets.

Second, a veterinary-care crisis persists, with burnout among professionals causing a shortage of crucial services.

Finally, shelters are reaching capacity across the country — and not just in the South, where overpopulation has long been a problem — forcing many to euthanize perfectly adoptable pets when they are out of space.

North Brookfield-based Second Chance, which runs four community veterinary hospitals, never euthanizes for space and is taking in as many transports as it can, but its space is limited as it grapples with an increase in surrenders from local pet owners.

“We are being stretched to our limits, and I am deeply concerned,” Second Chance CEO Sheryl Blancato said recently.

But there’s hope, too, she added, citing her own organization’s efforts to keep pets with their families, from subsidized rates at its hospitals and a pet food pantry to community vaccine clinics and veterinary care at senior-living residences.

But it needs help: more volunteers, more donations, more awareness of the problem.

Meg Talbert feels the same way, as she told BusinessWest in the story that begins on page 4. The executive director of Dakin Humane Society says volunteers and foster families are critical to the nonprofit’s work, but so is financial support.

“A corporate donation or a foundation or individual giving, they really let us do the work. They are that bridge that allows us to go that extra mile for the animals, and to help people out when they’re coming to us,” she said, whether they’re at the point of surrendering an animal or having trouble affording veterinary care.

The goal, in almost every case, for organizations like Dakin and Second Chance is to keep families and their pets together. Not only is it heartbreaking to have to surrender an animal, but every pet back in the shelter system is one more animal adding to an overcrowding problem that is not letting up.

That’s why, Talbert said, every adoption of a dog, cat, or other critter actually saves two lives: the adopted animal’s life, and the animal that adoption makes room for at the shelter. Just as every surrender compounds the problem, every rescue adoption improves it.

We encourage families who want to add a pet to their home to consider adopting first, not only to reduce the overcrowding issue, but to literally save a life worthy of saving — a pet with plenty of love and appreciation to spare.

Speaking of appreciation, Dakin, Second Chance, and other animal-welfare organizations are always grateful for not only financial gifts, but volunteers. As the season of giving commences, that’s something that should give us all paws — er, pause.