Mid-America Bully Breed Rescue spacer Mid-America Bully Breed Rescue
Welcome to Mid-America Bully Breed Rescue
Bull breeds navigation - left Content spacer Mid-America Bully Breed Rescue Main Content Content spacer Featured rescue pets available for adoption spacer

HOME

ABOUT MABBR
Learn about Mid-America Bully Breed's history and current mission. Meet MABBR's Team

DOGS FOR ADOPTION
Meet our rescued Incredi-Bulls and maybe meet your best friend, too!

ADOPTION PROCESS
Interested in a MABBR dog? Start here!

ADOPTION APPLICATION
Apply to adopt or foster a MABBR Incredi-Bull

ADOPTION EVENTS
Meet adoptable MABBR incredi-bulls or just have fun for a good cause!

BREED-SPECIFIC LEGISLATION
MABBR's official statement on BSL and why it is ineffective policy

BULLY BREED INFORMATION
Pit bulls, Bulldogs, Mastiffs, and more -learn about all here

HOW TO HELP
Information on volunteering, fostering, and donating

SPONSORSHIP PROGRAMS
Donors keep our programs running! See how you can help

INCREDIBULL TRANSFORMATION
See what medical care, generous donations and a whole lotta love can do

IDENTIFY THE PIT BULL
See how easy it is to be a victim of mistaken identity

THE TRUTH ABOUT PIT BULLS
Back to the basics

NEW BEGINNINGS
Warm and fuzzy photos of adopted bulldogs in their happy homes

RESOURCES
Education, legislation, rescues, clinics and spay/neuter

MABBR BLOG
Tired of having to defend your best friend? Vent on the MABBR Blog! News, updates and more

MABBR NEWSLETTER
All the bull that's fit for pits!

MYSPACE
Visit MABBR on our myspace page, 3000+ Friends and growing!

CONTACT

Mid-America Bully Breed Rescue is a 501 ( c )( 3 ) nonprofit organization

Mid-America
Bully Breed Rescue
P.O. Box 410233
Kansas City, MO
64141-0233

MABBR is licensed in both the
state of Kansas and Missouri

Mid-America Bully Breed Rescue's rescue efforts are made possible in part by a grant from Animal Farm Foundation.

Coffeyville flood and oil spill victims

Waters may have receded, but animal victims of the storm are still awaiting forever homes!

MABBR partnered with several others to save three homeless canine victims of the tragic Coffeyville, KS flood and oil spill, but we still need your help! These wondergul pooches need forever homes! After what they've endured, don't you think they deserve it? Please, consider opening up your home to Marvel, Aaliyah or Dora today!

Special thanks: Liz Perry, Desiree Bender and the Humane Society of the United States for rescuing these dogs during the spill and for all of their help with their medical bills!

Oil spill adds to misery of Plains flood victims
By Roxana Hegeman, Associated Press Writer


Michele Foster, right, holds the family dog Monday while her husband Curtis, left, cradles the dead body of their other dog after firefighters entered their Coffeyville home.

Photo By Travis Heying, The Wichita Eagle via AP

COFFEYVILLE, Kan. — The flood engulfing homes to the rooftops carried an extra curse Tuesday as a slick of 42,000 gallons of thick crude oil floated downstream with the mud and debris, coating everything it touched with a slimy, smelly layer of goo.

My question is how are they going to get all that oil out of the environment," said Mary Burge, a heart surgery patient who had to breathe from a portable oxygen tank because the petroleum odor Monday was so strong it could be detected by the crews of helicopters passing overhead.

By Tuesday, the oil was nearing a large Oklahoma reservoir that supplies water to several cities.

The Verdigris River had crested and was beginning to recede Tuesday at Coffeyville, but it was kept high by water being released from the Elk City and Fall River Toronto Lake reservoirs upstream, said Jim Miller, Montgomery County emergency manager.

"It's going to come down the Verdigris until they shut that water supply off," he said. "So it's just a matter of time."

A malfunction allowed the oil to spill from the Coffeyville Resources refinery on Sunday, while the plant was shutting down in advance of the flood heading toward it on the Verdigris River.

Sharon Watson, spokeswoman for the Kansas adjutant general, said the EPA and state officials would work with officials at the refinery to measure the amount of contamination and help the refinery clean up. In the meantime, however, Watson said, "We're asking everyone to avoid the floodwaters."

That wasn't an option for Fire Department Capt. Mike Mansfield, who rescued eight dogs from water-logged homes Monday. He said all the dogs found outside were covered in oil.

The oil slick had been expected to float into Oklahoma's Oologah Lake, about 30 miles northeast of Tulsa, early Tuesday, said Dave Bary, a spokesman for the Environmental Protection Agency in Dallas.

However, officials who flew over the river said that by late morning the slick was still about 5 or 6 miles from the lake entrance.

Tulsa is among the nine Oklahoma cities that get public water supplies from the Verdigris and Oologah.

The floating oil, which would enter the north end of the lake, wasn't expected to have an effect on water supply intakes located well below the surface at the south end, said Skylar McElhaney, a spokeswoman for the Oklahoma Department of Environmental Quality.

The oil joins other causes of misery for thousands of flood evacuees in Kansas, Oklahoma and Texas.

"We do have health concerns," said Bret Glendening, city manager in Osawatomie, Kan. "You've got stagnant water. The water's been into the wood. You have mold issues. There's a whole host of concerns flooding causes."

"All our utilities are under water," Fredonia Mayor Max Payne said.

However, the water had receded significantly at Osawatomie by Tuesday morning, said Mayor Philip Dudley. Pumps provided by the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers were "making significant progress."

"I saw drops (in water level) on the sides of houses of about a foot and half," Dudley said. "It's looking a lot better than it did Saturday and Sunday."

On Monday night, President Bush declared a major disaster in Kansas and ordered federal aid for recovery efforts.

Flooding on the Marais des Cygnes river stretched from Kansas into western Missouri, where residents of two small farm communities were urged to evacuate because high water was cutting off their access by road. Most residents of Rockville and Papinville — total population about 140 — were believed to have left, said Bates County Emergency Management Director Tim Young.

Eleven deaths have been blamed on weeks of heavy rain and flooding in Texas, where two men are missing.

More thunderstorms hit parts of Texas on Monday, flooding some roads. The National Weather Service said about 10 inches of rain fell by noon at Corpus Christi.

Two youngsters were rescued from an Arlington, Texas, drainage channel, one after floating half a mile downstream through at least three viaducts, said Fire Department Battalion Chief David Stapp. A handful of people had to be rescued from flooded homes in Laredo.

In North Little Rock, about 30 homes were evacuated Monday when heavy rain and a faulty drainage system caused flooding up to 6 feet deep in some spots.

Contributing: Associated Press writer Thomas Peipert in Cedar Hill, Texas, contributed to this report.

 
Marvel
Pit bull for adoption
Marvel
MABBR pit bull rescue spacer
Aaliyah
MABBR pit bull rescue spacer
Dora
Pit bull for adoption
Dora
MABBR pit bull rescue spacer
 
 
MABBR pit bull rescue spacer Mid-America Bull Breed Rescue, education, and outreach for all bully breeds spacer

HOME | ABOUT | DOGS | ADOPTION | APPLICATION | BULLY BREED INFO | HOW TO HELP | LEGISLATION | CONTACT