The Ring platform was briefly mentioned as a helpful community resource for locating lost pets. Residents are encouraged to post about missing animals on local networks like Ring, Nextdoor, and Facebook to quickly alert their neighbors, particularly during high-risk times like the Fourth of July.
Surveillance_flock
Clark County Community Development Learning Lab · Jun 18, 2026 · 0:00–0:34 · Watch on CVTV ↗
Keywords: Ring
What was said
0:00 My name is Caitlin Daniel. I'm an animal control officer for Clark County Animal Protection and Control, and I'm going to be talking about animal safety in summer. So this is a graph of some of the calls that we have. The first column is going to be summer, May through September, and the second is going to be like a fall/winter, October through February. It's broken down by types of calls that we receive. We receive more calls in the summer months when it's warmer, things like animals at large, cruelty and neglect complaints, so animals without food, water, and shelter, aggressive animals, injured and distressed. That can be something like animals left in a car, possibly a loose animal that's been hit by a car or
0:55 is injured some other way, noise complaints such as barking, confined animals, so an animal that was at large that somebody in the community has caught, or complaints about livestock. We're going to be talking about distress signals, so how to tell if an animal is in distress, animals in vehicles, good Samaritan laws that were put into place this last year, and paws on pavement, so how heat affects paws, sheltering requirements, fireworks, water safety, lost and found pets, and some resources and contacts at the end. So some contributing factors to
Evidence (1 match)
adjacent keyword 0:00–0:34 Ring
My name is Caitlin Daniel. I'm an animal control officer for Clark County Animal Protection and Control, and I'm going to be talking about animal safety in summer. So this is a graph of some of the calls that we have. The first column is going to be