The Shoofly Magazine
  • Home
    • Amtrak Gulf Coast: Latest News
    • 15 Minutes Photo Galleries
    • Arts Alive!
    • Bay Reads
    • Beach to Bayou
    • Big Buzz Blog
    • Coast Cuisine
    • The Eyes Have It
    • Good Neighbor
    • Living Large
    • Nature Notes
    • Noteworthy Women
    • On the Shoofly
    • Partner Spotlight
    • Second Saturday
    • Shared History
    • Sonny's Fishing Report
    • Talk of the Town
    • Town Green
    • Upcoming Events
  • Calendar
    • Upcoming Events
    • Calendar Users Guide
    • Calendar FAQs
  • Communities
    • Bay St. Louis Lifestyle
    • Diamondhead Lifestyle
    • Pass Christian Lifestyle
    • Waveland Lifestyle
  • Readers' Circle
    • Partners
  • Local Living
    • Upcoming Events
    • EAT
    • SHOP
    • PLAY >
      • Community Calendar
    • STAY >
      • Camping & RV Parks
    • TOURS >
      • Instagram Tours >
        • Beach Blvd. Instagram Ops
        • Main Street Instagram Ops
        • Second Street Instagram Ops
        • Depot District Instagram Stars
        • Black History Instagram Tour - Part 1
    • PETS
    • WEDDINGS
    • SERVICES >
      • Automotive
      • Construction
      • Entertainment
      • Financial Services
      • Food & Beverage
      • Health
      • Home & Garden
      • Legal Services
      • Marine & Boating
      • Marketing
      • Media
      • Office
      • Personal Care
      • Pets
      • Real Estate
      • Recreation
      • Transportation
      • Travel/Hospitality
      • Utilities
    • ORGANIZATIONS >
      • Churches
      • Government
      • Education >
        • Art Teachers
      • Hurricane Prep Guide
      • Wildlife Rescue in South Mississippi

Good Neighbor - June 2016

6/1/2016

 

Dorty Necaise

The Bay's animal control officer deals efficiently and humanely with anything that flies, swims, walks, crawls, or slithers - including the occasional irate citizen.  Meet Dorty Necaise, a dog's best friend.  
story by Ellis Anderson,  photos by Denise Hines and Ellis Anderson
More Current Stories
Picture
​Anyone in Bay St. Louis who’s ever had a pet go missing,  a raccoon stuck in their garage, or a snake in their kitchen has heard this advice: Call Dorty.
 
For good reason. If it flies, swims, walks, crawls, or slithers, Dorty Necaise can deal with it humanely.
 
Dorty will soon be celebrating his tenth year as the city’s animal control officer. The "officer" part of the job title is especially fitting. He’s performed his duties with such dignity, compassion and diplomacy, animal lovers in the community hail him as heroic. Calling him a mere dogcatcher would be both risky and revealing, since it might seem disrespectful to Dorty’s many loyal fans and would only go to show the speaker’s ignorance. 

Good Neighbor 
is sponsored by

Picture

Click here and scroll down to read archived
Good Neighbor
​
columns!
In the interest of full disclosure: the writer of this article is a founding member of the Dorty Necaise fan club. I first met him in 2008, when a freakishly shy boxer-mix followed one of my own dogs home after an unsanctioned neighborhood walk-about. The brown stray decided my front porch was its new home. It was large and fierce looking and so skittish, it would bolt with bulging eyes whenever I tried to approach. Friends urged me to call Dorty.
 
Dorty offered to set a trap for the wild dog. Then he explained that since the dog was so unsocialized, the overcrowded animal shelter would probably have to euthanize it. I asked about alternatives. Dorty told me that if I could find a rescue facility within three states that would take on the brown dog, he would trap it and drive it there.

On his own dime, with his own time.

 
It wouldn’t have been the first time Dorty had transported animals to save their lives. By that point, he’d racked up tens of thousands of miles — and saved hundreds of dogs and cats — in a post-Katrina project. He was part of a local team that worked with national animal rescue organizations to find homes outside the area for animals unwanted here on the coast.

story continued below


Thinking about adoption?  Click here to see dogs available today at the Hancock Shelter! 
Picture
Dorty and the shelter's disabled cat, Camo. photo by Denise Hines
The compassionate connection with the animal world began when Dorty was growing up in the crossroads community of Standard, deep in the county’s countryside. Both sides of his family have lived in Hancock County for generations.
 
“My mother was a Cuevas married to a Necaise,” Dorty says, smiling. “It doesn’t get more local than that. I’m a native through and through.”
 
When his father passed away, the extended family helped raise Dorty.  Cousins became like siblings. As a teen, he imagined becoming a teacher or a veterinarian, both careers that would allow him to follow his interests in history and animal care. After graduating from Pass Christian High School in 1998, he attended Pearl River Community College before taking a job with Dr. Jennifer Hendricks at Live Oak Animal Hospital in Pass Christian.

While working as an all-round assistant at the clinic, Dorty discovered the job offered the same fulfillment he’d imagined finding as a vet. Every day, he cared for animals and interacted with their owners. He worked there happily until the clinic was destroyed by Hurricane Katrina in 2005.
 
In the storm’s grim aftermath, he began volunteering with Dr. Hendricks at the Waveland Animal Shelter. The situation there was dire. The small, outdated facility served the entire county, which had a pre-Katrina population of 40,000. That meant thousands of dogs and cats, separated from owners or evacuees who never returned, funneled into the tiny cinderblock building. Many were euthanized for lack of alternatives.
 
The tragic situation came to the attention of a new organization called Animal Rescue Front (ARF), which focused on rescuing animals in six Mississippi communities, including Hancock County. The group was one of several that helped local volunteers by organizing and providing transport for dogs and cats slated to be put down.
 
For the next year, Dorty worked for ARF and other organizations delivering unwanted Hancock County animals across the country. He drove as far as Oregon and New England on transport runs. The Bay St. Louis animal control officer at the time, Curtis Quave, also worked closely with the program. In 2006, Curtis told Dorty that he was leaving the job for another and urged his friend to apply for the position. Dorty won the job. At the mayor’s behest, he continued to help out in Waveland, where he learned the ins and outs of shelter management.
 
Today, Dorty is still involved with the shelter, now housed in a new facility (thanks in large part to a Pennsylvania group of donors and volunteers from the Bucks-Mont Katrina Project). He says, “It’s not the biggest or the most state-of–the-art facility, but by leaps and bounds, it’s better than anything we had.”
 
He still helps to coordinate adoption efforts and transports, which has had an extraordinarily positive impact. Dorty says that the shelter now has the lowest euthanasia rate in its history thanks to support from the Friends of the Animals local non-profit, PetSmart adoption programs, funding that helps with adoption fees, and the transport work that continues with Animal Rescue Front.
 

“Except for months when the weather is terrible up north, we do an average of two transports a month, with 5-10 dogs per transport. Over a year, that represents up to 200 dogs a year that are saved.”  
 
Dorty also believes that spay and neuter programs, funded in a large part by Friends, are making a difference on the number of “throwaway” animals. Meanwhile, feral cat catch-and-release programs are beginning to cut down on the numbers of ownerless cats, which can decimate area wildlife.
Picture
Dorty with Tia, a Lab mix currently up for adoption at the Hancock Animal Shelter, photo by Denise Hines
The goal of having a no-kill shelter is especially important to Dorty. He vividly remembers an incident a few years ago that forever rocked his perceptions of animal awareness. Two white Great Dane puppies were brought into the shelter from the Pearlington area. The puppies, larger than many full-grown dogs, had multiple and serious health problems due to inbreeding. The brother and sister both had sweet, gentle natures, but were deaf and nearly blind and had severe skin conditions. Dorty took a special interest in the pair and began to check on them daily.
 
However, their health continued to deteriorate. County resources are limited and a home or rescue option couldn’t be found for the puppies. After some weeks, the decision was made to euthanize them both. The female one was led out first. The white puppy calmly accepted the deadly shot.
 
After her heart had stopped, her brother was brought out.
 
“The brother came out and understood that his sister was dead,” says Dorty, his eyes filling. “He just laid down on top of her body and waited for his turn. He didn’t struggle or resist.
 
“I’d done that job for years and had never broken down until that day. I had to turn away and started crying.
 
“Most people see animals as not having human sensibilities. Devotion like that is supposed to just be a human trait. But those puppies loved each other so much.  Seeing that changed the way I thought about animals, even though I’ve been around them my entire life.”
 
Euthanizing dogs is the most difficult aspect of the job. Animal control officers must also be able to read animals who can’t speak to explain that they’re scared, angry, or in pain. Another important skill is being able to deal with pet owners and the public. Dorty laughs when he says that people are generally harder to read, and much more unpredictable than any animal.
 
“Many years ago, we may have been just dogcatchers, but nowadays, we’re educating people, helping out at the shelter, and networking with national organizations.”
 
He gives high marks to the staff at the Hancock Animal Shelter and recognizes the complexity of their jobs as well. “A lot of people think I could do that job, I could play with puppies all day. But a shelter worker has to be a caretaker, a social media expert, a counselor, a therapist, a dog trainer and groomer and a bookkeeper. It’s so much more than people think.” 
Picture
Dorty w/ HCAS Director Toni Necaise (left) and kennel techs Trista Fleming (far left) and Caitlyn Jewell (far right). photo by Denise Hines
 Dorty lives in Diamondhead with his partner and three animal companions. Two are mixed-breed rescues (Luna and Rosie) and he’s taken over care of his mother’s dog, a Peekapoo named Pearl.
 
“They’re like my kids,” he says. “I’d lose myself if something happened to those little dogs.”
 
“Animals have feelings. They know when you’re sick or sad and they will try to make you feel better. Even if a person treats a dog like dirt, the dog forgets that. All he wants is their affection and approval.”
 
Despite — or maybe because of — the challenges of the job, Dorty finds it very fulfilling. “At the end of the day, I do love my job. There’s been good and bad times.” 

He gestures over to a big brown dog, gray around the muzzle. “One of the happily-ever-after stories is right there,” he says.
  The dog sleeps on the carpet of my living room, where I’m interviewing Dorty. It’s the same dog he offered to help transport eight years before.
 
After Dorty made that offer in 2008, I spent weeks scouring the Internet, trying to find a rescue group that would take the powerful but cowering creature. I finally found one in Arkansas that would consider accepting him if he was neutered and had up-to-date shots. Which meant I first had to train him to walk on a leash and ride in a car. In the weeks it took to accomplish that, I named the brown dog Buster. We developed a strong bond. I never called Dorty back.
 
After our interview for this article, I wanted to get a photo of Buster sitting next to Dorty, since he owes his life to the officer's kind offer. But even after years of living in a pampered environment, Buster has never lost his suspicion of strangers. However, eventually, Dorty must have passed some sort of trust test, because Buster stretched out relaxing, with Dorty standing behind him. 
 
You can’t pet me, he seemed to say, but I’m good with turning my back on you. 
 
And that’s as happy an ending as the three of us could ever have imagined.    
Picture
Buster and Dorty

Comments are closed.

    Picture
    Picture
    Picture
    Picture
    Picture
    Picture
    Picture
    Picture
    Picture
    Picture
    Picture
    Picture
    Picture
    Picture
    Picture
    Picture
    Picture
    Picture
    Picture
    Picture

    RSS Feed

    Categories

    All
    15 Minutes
    Across The Bridge
    Antiques
    Architecture
    Art
    Arts Alive
    At Home In The Bay
    Bay Bride
    Bay Business
    Bay Reads
    Beach To Bayou
    Beach-to-bayou
    Beautiful Things
    Benefit
    Big Buzz
    Boats
    Body+Mind+Spirit
    Books
    BSL Council Updates
    BSL P&Z
    Business
    Business Buzz
    Casting My Net
    Civics
    Coast Cuisine
    Coast Lines Column
    Day Tripping
    Design
    DIY
    Editors Notes
    Education
    Environment
    Events
    Fashion
    Food
    Friends Of The Animal Shelter
    Good Neighbor
    Grape Minds
    Growing Up Downtown
    Harbor Highlights
    Health
    History
    Honor Roll
    House And Garden
    Legends And Legacies
    Local Focal
    Lodging
    Mardi Gras
    Mind+Body+Spirit
    Mother Of Pearl
    Murphy's Musical Notes
    Music
    Nature
    Nature Notes
    New Orleans
    News
    Noteworthy Women
    Old Town Merchants
    On The Shoofly
    Parenting
    Partner Spotlight
    Pass Christian
    Public Safety
    Puppy-dog-tales
    Rheta-grimsley-johnson
    Science
    Second Saturday
    Shared History
    Shared-history
    Shelter-stars
    Shoofly
    Shore Thing Fishing Report
    Sponsor Spotlight
    Station-house-bsl
    Talk Of The Town
    The Eyes Have It
    Tourism
    Town Green
    Town-green
    Travel
    Tying-the-knot
    Video
    Vintage-vignette
    Vintage-vignette
    Waveland
    Weddings
    Wellness
    Window-shopping
    Wines-and-dining

    Archives

    December 2023
    March 2023
    February 2023
    January 2023
    December 2022
    November 2022
    October 2022
    September 2022
    August 2022
    July 2022
    June 2022
    May 2022
    April 2022
    March 2022
    February 2022
    January 2022
    December 2021
    November 2021
    October 2021
    September 2021
    August 2021
    July 2021
    June 2021
    May 2021
    April 2021
    March 2021
    February 2021
    January 2021
    December 2020
    November 2020
    October 2020
    September 2020
    August 2020
    July 2020
    June 2020
    May 2020
    April 2020
    March 2020
    February 2020
    January 2020
    December 2019
    November 2019
    October 2019
    September 2019
    August 2019
    July 2019
    June 2019
    May 2019
    April 2019
    March 2019
    February 2019
    January 2019
    December 2018
    November 2018
    October 2018
    September 2018
    August 2018
    July 2018
    June 2018
    May 2018
    April 2018
    March 2018
    February 2018
    January 2018
    December 2017
    November 2017
    October 2017
    September 2017
    August 2017
    July 2017
    June 2017
    May 2017
    April 2017
    March 2017
    February 2017
    January 2017
    December 2016
    November 2016
    October 2016
    September 2016
    August 2016
    July 2016
    June 2016
    May 2016
    April 2016
    March 2016
    February 2016
    January 2016
    December 2015
    November 2015
    October 2015
    September 2015
    August 2015
    July 2015
    June 2015
    May 2015
    April 2015
    March 2015
    February 2015
    January 2015
    December 2014
    November 2014
    August 2014
    November 2013
    August 2013
    June 2013
    March 2013
    February 2013
    December 2012
    October 2012
    September 2012
    May 2012
    March 2012
    February 2012
    December 2011
    November 2011
    October 2011
    September 2011
    August 2011
    July 2011
    June 2011

Shoofly Magazine Partners

​Our Shoofly Partners are local businesses and organizations who share our mission to enrich community life in Bay St. Louis, Waveland, Diamondhead and Pass Christian. These are limited in number to maximize visibility.  Email us now to become a Shoofly Partner!
Picture

Picture
Picture
Picture
Picture

Picture
Picture
Picture
Picture

Picture
Picture
Picture
Picture

Picture
Picture
Picture
Picture

Picture
Picture
Picture
Picture
Picture

Alice Moseley Folk Art Museum

Bay Town Inn

Bay-tique Boutique

The Bay Bum

The Shops of Century Hall

Chiniche Engineering

Creole Creamery

The Cultured Oak

The French Potager

Hancock County Historical Society

HL Raymond Properties

Kenny Dental

Lagarde's Fine Wine & Spirits

The Loft
The Mane Salon

Magnolia Antiques

Ms. Mary's Old Town Snoballs

Mystic Ghost Tours

PJ's Coffee

Salty Soul Outfitters

Theatre in the Pass

VSPA at Hancock Women's Center

The Wedding Collection ​

John & Ning Wiebmer


The Shoofly Magazine  is published by MAC Media, LLC.   Unless otherwise attributed, all written content and photography copyright MAC Media, LLC

Terms of Use and Privacy Policy
  • Home
    • Amtrak Gulf Coast: Latest News
    • 15 Minutes Photo Galleries
    • Arts Alive!
    • Bay Reads
    • Beach to Bayou
    • Big Buzz Blog
    • Coast Cuisine
    • The Eyes Have It
    • Good Neighbor
    • Living Large
    • Nature Notes
    • Noteworthy Women
    • On the Shoofly
    • Partner Spotlight
    • Second Saturday
    • Shared History
    • Sonny's Fishing Report
    • Talk of the Town
    • Town Green
    • Upcoming Events
  • Calendar
    • Upcoming Events
    • Calendar Users Guide
    • Calendar FAQs
  • Communities
    • Bay St. Louis Lifestyle
    • Diamondhead Lifestyle
    • Pass Christian Lifestyle
    • Waveland Lifestyle
  • Readers' Circle
    • Partners
  • Local Living
    • Upcoming Events
    • EAT
    • SHOP
    • PLAY >
      • Community Calendar
    • STAY >
      • Camping & RV Parks
    • TOURS >
      • Instagram Tours >
        • Beach Blvd. Instagram Ops
        • Main Street Instagram Ops
        • Second Street Instagram Ops
        • Depot District Instagram Stars
        • Black History Instagram Tour - Part 1
    • PETS
    • WEDDINGS
    • SERVICES >
      • Automotive
      • Construction
      • Entertainment
      • Financial Services
      • Food & Beverage
      • Health
      • Home & Garden
      • Legal Services
      • Marine & Boating
      • Marketing
      • Media
      • Office
      • Personal Care
      • Pets
      • Real Estate
      • Recreation
      • Transportation
      • Travel/Hospitality
      • Utilities
    • ORGANIZATIONS >
      • Churches
      • Government
      • Education >
        • Art Teachers
      • Hurricane Prep Guide
      • Wildlife Rescue in South Mississippi