The Brief
- The North Texas Wildlife Center, a non-profit animal rescue, must find a new location in 60 days or face closure due to city zoning violations.
- The center has seen a 50% increase in rescued animals this year, outgrowing its current Plano residential spot.
- They need a centrally located new facility with outdoor space to continue helping injured and orphaned wildlife.
PLANO, Texas – When someone finds an injured or orphaned wild animal like a bird, duck, or bunny, the non-profit rescue center is the go-to place to save a life, but now they are the ones in need of a helping hand.
The North Texas Wildlife Center has grown so much in recent years that it’s outgrown its home in the Plano neighborhood. The city now gives them 60 days to find a new location, or they will be forced to close their doors.
What they’re saying:
While the organization’s expansion is a good thing for wild animals such as opossums, raccoons, cotton tails, squirrels, skunks, water fowl, egrets, herons, blue jays, owls, hawks and more.…