To help dog and cat rescue organizations in the Southeast save more lives by providing timely, low-cost, high-quality veterinary care to support homeless pets in finding their forever homes.
To help dog and cat rescue organizations in the Southeast save more lives by providing timely, low-cost, high-quality veterinary care to support homeless pets in finding their forever homes.
Harmony Animal Rescue Clinic (HARC) was founded on a deep commitment to community and animal welfare. In 2018, as Harmony Animal Hospital (HAH) moved into a new facility, founders Dr. Jodi Reed and Jason Lenhardt saw more than just an empty building—they saw an opportunity to give back to the community that had supported them for nearly a decade. Fueled by Dr. Jodi’s passion for helping rescue groups care for homeless cats and dogs, they transformed the original HAH location into HARC.
The need was urgent. With an estimated 42,000 homeless cats and dogs in North Carolina and hundreds of rescue groups struggling to access affordable veterinary care, something had to change. In 2020, HARC officially opened its doors as the East Coast’s only nonprofit veterinary clinic dedicated exclusively to serving rescue organizations.
NC Rescue Groups Served: 122
Rescue Group Pets Served: 11,738+
Surgeries Performed: 9,446+
Since then, HARC has become vital to the animal welfare ecosystem—partnering with over 120 rescue groups, treating more than 11,000 animals, and performing 9,100+ surgeries. These numbers reflect lives changed, homes found, and futures rewritten.
Across North Carolina’s 200+ animal shelters and 350+ rescue groups for dogs and cats, one challenge remains: access to affordable veterinary care. At HARC, we’re here to remove that barrier—but we can’t do it alone. Your support powers life-saving care, from critical surgeries to routine treatments, helping vulnerable animals become healthy, adoptable pets.
Harmony Animal Rescue Clinic (HARC) was founded on a deep commitment to community and animal welfare. In 2018, as Harmony Animal Hospital (HAH) moved into a new facility, founders Dr. Jodi Reed and Jason Lenhardt saw more than just an empty building—they saw an opportunity to give back to the community that had supported them for nearly a decade. Fueled by Dr. Jodi’s passion for helping rescue groups care for homeless cats and dogs, they transformed the original HAH location into HARC.
The need was urgent. With an estimated 42,000 homeless cats and dogs in North Carolina and hundreds of rescue groups struggling to access affordable veterinary care, something had to change. In 2020, HARC officially opened its doors as the East Coast’s only nonprofit veterinary clinic dedicated exclusively to serving rescue organizations.
NC Rescue Groups Served: 122
Rescue Group Pets Served: 11,738+
Surgeries Performed: 9,446+
Since then, HARC has become vital to the animal welfare…