At a meeting on Monday, the Juneau Assembly approved an ordinance allowing Juneau Animal Rescue to lease land on Crazy Horse Drive for a new animal shelter. The nonprofit says the move is critical to replace its current facility.
The ordinance authorizes the city to lease an eight-acre portion of a city-owned parcel on Crazy Horse Drive to the shelter at a reduced rate. While the land’s fair market lease value is estimated at $3,000 per month, the assembly approved a lease of $10 per year for a 35-year term.
City code allows publicly owned land to be leased below market value to nonprofit organizations when the land is used to provide services that supplement government functions, such as animal sheltering.
Juneau Animal Rescue board member Kevin Ritchie told Assembly members the parcel was chosen deliberately.
“The mounds that were placed there by the city back in the ’60s actually make really nice walking trails for dogs,” Ritchie said. “And so for very little money, we can develop these walking trails ourselves.”
Assembly member Paul Kelly asked why the request expanded from earlier discussions of a smaller parcel and asked whether additional grant funding had been secured to support development.
Ritchie said the land’s wet conditions would make development costly. He also noted the larger footprint would also provide a noise buffer for neighboring properties and allow for future expansion, including partnerships with other nonprofits, such as the Juneau Kennel Club.
The push for a new shelter dates back several years. In 2021, an assessment of the city found that the existing shelter did not meet modern animal care standards.
Among the recommended improvements were housing that allows animals better access to fresh air, light, and outdoor exercise areas, improved air-handling systems to reduce the spread of disease, and safer spaces for animals beyond cats and dogs.
The ordinance passed unanimously. While the land lease has been approved, Juneau Animal Rescue still faces the challenge of raising the funds needed to design and build the new shelter.
