The Borderland Rescue Fund has opened a new lifeline for local pet families. On Monday, Aug. 19, the group launched its Public Pet Pantry initiative at the Downtown Main Library, a simple idea with a big goal: keep pets fed, healthy, and at home with the people who love them. In partnership with the El Paso Community Foundation and the City of El Paso, the program places 14 public pet pantries at library branches across the city, creating easy, stigma-free access to food and basic supplies.
City and community leaders joined the first pantry opening and set the tone by donating themselves. Mayor Renard Johnson, City Council Member Chris Canales, El Paso Community Foundation President Eric Pearson, and Borderland Rescue Fund Lead Program Officer Tess Passero were on hand to mark the start. Their presence underscored what this effort is about. It is not only about kibble and canned food. It is about neighbors taking care of neighbors when budgets are tight and shelter space is even tighter.
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Local shelters and rescues are over capacity. When families face hard choices, lack of pet food can be the small thing that causes a heartbreaking surrender. The Public Pet Pantry turns that moment around. Each library branch now doubles as a donation site and a pickup point, removing barriers and meeting people where they already go for books, internet access, and community resources. It is a practical way to reduce intake at shelters while protecting the bond between people and their animals…