Angela Chapman: Finding a new leash on life

by | Nov 2025

THE MAN at the counter didn’t want to give up his dog. He was worried the pup had heartworms, but couldn’t afford the vet visit to know for sure. The New Leash on Life team offered to help. At the time, a heartworm test cost the shelter just $5, and staff promised to provide prevention if the results came back negative. They did — and the man went home with his beloved dog, relieved, returning twice to weed-eat the property in gratitude.

“That $5 fix? That was the game-changer,” said Angela Chapman, New Leash on Life’s director. “The cost of care for an animal at our shelter far exceeds $5.”

Stories like this have shaped Angela’s leadership at New Leash on Life, Wilson County’s humane organization that’s rewriting what it means to be a shelter.

Photography by Steve Zak

From Truck Driver to Shelter Director
Angela didn’t arrive at New Leash by a straight path. Before joining, she had been a teacher for seven years, driven a semitruck for five years, worked as a mental health case manager, and even run a dog treat business inspired by her Great Dane with allergies. “I wasn’t from this world,” she admitted. “But I did have a diverse background, and it seems that those experiences really helped with me fitting into this role.”

She was hired as interim director in May 2015. “A whole lot of people trusted that I had good leadership skills, and we all started kind of learning how to navigate things together,” she said. Ten years later, she’s still leading — with a vision that has moved New Leash from simply housing animals to building a network of prevention and support for the community

A Palpable Shift
New Leash was founded as the Humane Association, but in 2009, the name change signaled a transformation: a shift from open-intake with a high euthanasia rate to limited-intake that no longer euthanizes animals for needed space.

“We only take animals as space allows,” Angela said. “Until an animal is adopted, [another] animal doesn’t get to come in, but it means each animal is placed, and we are not euthanizing for space.”

It’s a constant challenge. Wilson County has about 150,000 residents, and New Leash can house roughly 100 animals at a time. “The math doesn’t math,” Angela said. “We are always full.”

This reality reflects a broader push across Tennessee. Statewide, shelters collectively saved over 90,000 dogs and cats in 2020, reaching an 87% save rate, according to Best Friends Animal Society. Nashville Humane Association now maintains a 98% save rate, and Montgomery County AC&C increased its live release rate from 77% in 2023 to 82% in 2024.

Photography by Steve Zak

Prevention Over Reaction
New Leash has widened its focus beyond kennels and adoption days to manage the pressure. “At the end of the day, truthfully, we really want the shelter to be the last option,” Angela said.

At the center of this shift is The JOY Clinic, named in honor of longtime supporter Joy Bishop. The clinic provides affordable spay and neuter surgeries for cats and dogs in Wilson County and surrounding counties — thousands over the past decade — helping to prevent tens of thousands of unplanned births. “The JOY Clinic helps make it possible to keep pets in their homes instead of in our kennels,” Angela said.

This work is especially urgent with cats. “I have become the crazy cat lady,” Angela joked. “Not because I have 100 cats but because I’ve been educated on how fast cats can reproduce.” A kitten can get pregnant at four months, deliver at six, and have multiple litters a year. “Everyone thinks kitten season sounds adorable. We want to cry.”

Her first question whenever someone calls about a stray is simple: Is it fixed? “That really helps us know if we’re dealing with one animal or if we’re preventing dozens more later,” she said.

The Heart of the Mission
Angela’s leadership has been shaped by small, human moments like the man with the Chihuahua — and multiplied by the community around her. Support comes in every form, from longtime donors to brand-new residents who just want to help.

“It’s amazing to me the different walks of life and the different facets of how people chose to come and support us,” Angela said. Some give in memory of a loved one. Others donate with specific requests — “this money has to go to the dogs” — while others simply say, “put it where it’s needed most.”

Even as New Leash looks toward a new facility — with indoor meet-and-greet rooms, volunteer training space, and areas for community events — the heartbeat of the shelter is the same: people coming together to do what they can with what they have.

When asked why she stays, Angela didn’t hesitate. “I just love it,” she said. “Even on the hardest days… those do not override the best days.”

Photography by Steve Zak

How You Can Help
Angela’s first question is always: Is it fixed? That’s where you can start, too.

  • Fix first. Spay or neuter your pets and help address overpopulation at its root.
  • Keep pets with families. Before surrendering, call New Leash about pantry support, low-cost clinic services, or courtesy postings.
  • Volunteer or donate. From weeding the grounds (like Angela’s heartworm-test visitor) to fostering kittens, there’s a role for everyone.

As Angela puts it, the goal is simple: “We really want the shelter to be the last option.” With a little prevention and a lot of heart, New Leash on Life is making that possible, one pet and one person at a time. GN

Nominate your loved ones for a story:

More Good News

Letter From the Editor

Letter From the Editor

IN MARCH of last year, my cousin’s work schedule became incompatible with raising his first pet, a brown and white Bernedoodle puppy. I took her in, not knowing just how much she would change, well,...

read more
Letter From the Editor

Letter From the Editor

THE CREAK of an old wooden floor, the worn edges of a brick building, the way a nameplate on a storefront shines a little softer with age. These are not just small details from the past. They are...

read more
Letter From the Editor

Letter From the Editor

“FRANKENSTEIN,” PUBLISHED in 1818, is considered the first science fiction novel. The Gothic story cracked open an entire genre of literature that has endless new entries today. It inspired...

read more
Letter From the Editor

Letter From the Editor

THE SCENT of warm butter-covered popcorn and the huge roar of the crowd… does anything bring you back faster than a Friday night under the stadium lights? For me, it’s a flood of memories: the...

read more
Letter From the Editor

Letter From the Editor

IF YOU’VE ever seen a fighter jet cut across the sky, you know what powerful looks like. You know what freedom sounds like. That roar overhead reminds us that we live in a country where people put...

read more
James Briggs: Leadership in action

James Briggs: Leadership in action

LIGHTS FLASH across the stage, lighting up three guitarists as they bring to life the energy of ’90s rock. Behind them, at the drum set, sits James Briggs, providing the rhythm and drive that helps...

read more
Letter From the Editor

Letter From the Editor

A FAMILY LOADS up their navy blue Jeep in Tennessee and takes a cross-country road trip. It’ll take several days to get to the Sequoia National Park in California. There may be hours when the Jeep...

read more
Letter From the Editor

Letter From the Editor

WHEN YOU choose a locally owned business over a national chain, you’re not just spending your money, you’re planting it. And the roots of that investment reach deep. Every dollar counts, and it...

read more
Letter From the Editor

Letter From the Editor

A STUDENT IN our community today will walk the halls of Congress with a pinned American flag on their chest. A student in our community today will pray their knees still hold when their nerves get...

read more
Jenna Jones: Made to dance

Jenna Jones: Made to dance

JOY AND laughter fill the hallways of Belamour Ballet Dance Academy, bright colors swirling gracefully as dancers of all ages practice their craft. The academy is a beloved location for many...

read more
Letter From the Editor

Letter From the Editor

THE SOUNDS of the self-checkout registers beep through the entire store. The short lines of people with baskets and carts move across the reflective tile like a conveyor belt and out the door. Uh,...

read more
Letter From the Editor

Letter From the Editor

A nurse walked down the hallway his mother walked decades before he did. Beep … beep … he could hear the sounds from patients’ rooms. He kept a small keepsake pinned to his scrubs, a pin his mother...

read more
Chris Crowell: Rooted in Service

Chris Crowell: Rooted in Service

It might be at a city council meeting, at a Rotary Club fish fry, or at Liberty State Bank’s veteran’s breakfast, but you will always see Chris Crowell involved with the community. Crowell’s roots...

read more
Letter From the Editor

Letter From the Editor

The people of the year 1000 faced division, uncertainty, and fear for the future. They didn’t know it then, but they stood at the edge of change, transitioning from the Dark Ages to the Middle Ages....

read more
Letter From the Editor

Letter From The Editor

AUTUMN SETTLES into our town like a puppy in a warm bed. There’s a magic in the air that only this season can bring. Golden leaves drift gently from the trees, painting the sidewalks in shades of...

read more
Help Is a Click Away

Help Is a Click Away

WILSONHELPS.ORG IS a large-scale, comprehensive, and user-friendly guide to Wilson County’s broad array of available aid. This is the most general way to describe what is an enormous,...

read more
Neighbors Helping Neighbors

Neighbors Helping Neighbors

PAYING IT forward describes the beneficiary of a good deed repaying the kindness to others rather than paying it back to the original benefactor. It has also been referred to as serial reciprocity....

read more
A Story of Faith & Peace

A Story of Faith & Peace

IN 2020, less than 6,000 people across the United States became living organ donors, according to the United Network for Organ Sharing. Lebanon is proud to be home to one of those brave donors:...

read more
Los Compadres: A Lebanon Favorite

Los Compadres: A Lebanon Favorite

WHEN I’M in the mood for an authentic Mexican dinner, one of my go-to restaurants in Lebanon is Los Compadres. It always hits the spot, and my most recent visit was no exception. Our server, Manny,...

read more
Letter From the Editor

Letter From The Editor

SHE FLASHES her lights and pushes the gas pedal a little harder. The walkie-talkie is too quiet, so she spins the dial and makes her bulletproof vest a little more comfortable. She worked hard to...

read more
A Safe Haven

A Safe Haven

HEROES COME in many shapes and sizes, but at the end of the day, each has the same important quality: they are willing to do difficult things to help people in need. A hero might rescue someone from...

read more
David Ashley: Pick Up Your Cross

David Ashley: Pick Up Your Cross

WITH EVERY heavy step down the road, Pastor David Ashley’s rugged hands grip the weight of a wooden cross — a symbol of strength and sacrifice — carried not for himself but for the countless victims...

read more
Letter From the Editor

Letter From the Editor

OUR FOOD nourishes us, from the soil beneath our feet to the table where we gather with family and friends. The hot sun beams from the sky into the field of sprouting seeds. Farmers rise early,...

read more
Kansha Japanese Express

Kansha Japanese Express

KANSHA JAPANESE Express was an excellent choice for a quick lunch date. It’s a charming restaurant with a nice variety of Japanese cuisine. The atmosphere was laid-back, with a few subtle touches to...

read more
Christy Mock Opens the Prom Doors

Christy Mock Opens the Prom Doors

THE PROM is an American rite of passage that has, through cultural ups and downs, become an enshrined part of adolescence for almost a century. Yet the costs associated with the prom — costs that...

read more
Sherry’s Run

Sherry’s Run

FOR NEARLY 20 years now, in August and September, green bows have been found all around Wilson County, Tennessee. Some people pass by the vibrant bows not knowing what they represent, while others...

read more
President Stumb

President Stumb

AS THE president of Cumberland University for the last nine years, Dr. Paul Stumb has become an important figure both on campus and within the broader Lebanon community. President Stumb recently...

read more
Unexpected Delight

Unexpected Delight

LET ME start by saying that I’m not a fan of bar food, so I wouldn’t choose a sports bar for lunch. However, I recently met a business associate for lunch at Coach’s Eastgate Grille off Highway 109...

read more
From Katrina to Compassion

From Katrina to Compassion

THOSE WHO lived along the Gulf Coast braced for impact or fled further inland despite gasoline shortages and lanes of traffic that steadily crept north. As a nation, we held our collective breaths,...

read more
Recipes: Fuel for Focus

Recipes: Fuel for Focus

RISE AND shine to breakfasts that fuel minds and bodies alike! Celebrate the power of wholesome, delicious meals to kickstart learning and energize young students. We’ll dish up recipes packed with...

read more

Nominate your loved ones for a story:

Latest Good News