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Stu Bykofsky: Forgiveness a rare animal with some animal-welfare groups

"Let no good deed go unpunished." - Attributed to American financier John P. Grier, banker Andrew W. Mellon and writer Clare Boothe Luce, among others.

"Let no good deed go unpunished."

- Attributed to American financier John P. Grier, banker Andrew W. Mellon and writer Clare Boothe Luce, among others.

THE Michael Vick Salvage Project that divided the Eagles fan base also fractured the animal-welfare community, with the Humane Society of the United States in the doghouse with some who oppose HSUS' deal to work with the felonious quarterback.

In a 2 1/2-hour meeting yesterday, the divided met the fractured. For visuals, think Grand Canyon and San Andreas Fault.

The meeting with local and national animal-welfare organizations was initiated - better late than never - by the Eagles. Owner Jeff Lurie, the dog-loving, Reluctant Forgiver, did not attend the press-barred meeting, nor did Vick, the man who put "con" in controversy. The Eagles suited up president Joe Banner to enter the lion's den.

"It was a meeting that we felt needed to happen," Eagles spokeswoman Pamela Browner-Crawley e-mailed me, but she treated the guest list like the Eagles playbook, declining to release it because . . . because it is a state secret? Like Nixon's "enemies list"? Clinton's "bimbo eruption" list?

Lurie was, to hear him tell it, trying to do a good deed by giving Vick a second chance, which was more than the dogs in Vick's Bad Newz Kennels got.

My sources saw representatives from the Pennsylvania

SPCA, area county SPCAs, plus other animal-welfare advocates, such as puppy-mill foe Bill Smith of Main Line Rescue and local activist Marianne Bessey, who protests pet-store sales of puppies and elephants in zoos, among other things.

The meeting was generally calm, highlighted with occasional emotion, with Banner basically being a tackling dummy and not fighting back. This was a "listen and learn" session, to fight the bad PR mud slide.

When HSUS announced it would work with Vick, "those in animal welfare were really shocked," said Karel I. Minor, executive director of the Berks County SPCA.

Part of the shock may have come from how far HSUS moved from its July 2007 position. A month before Vick took a guilty plea, HSUS called for his suspension from the NFL, but now - after his conviction - HSUS is OK with the dog-killer rejoining the league.

To many animal lovers, Vick is a toxic mixture of swine flu, bubonic plague and leprosy. They wouldn't come near him if he were in a hyperbaric chamber.

After the HSUS/Vick shotgun marriage was announced, about 1,000 members immediately quit in disgust, said HSUS CEO Wayne Pacelle. The total might be higher now.

The local Philadelphia Animal Welfare Society said it "will welcome his support," but "Michael Vick will in no way serve as a spokesperson for PAWS or be allowed anywhere near our animals."

A promotion last week with the author of "Wally's World," a book about a bull terrier, was promptly canceled when PAWS learned author Marsha Boulton had issued an invitation to Vick. A Canadian, Boulton told me she didn't realize how loathed Vick is by some.

After conviction but before he was sentenced, Vick met with the People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals and took an "empathy test," which you can find online.

PETA Assistant Director Dan Shannon said Vick seemed "intelligent and thoughtful" but "Michael and his camp have done little more than mouth assurances that he's learned his lesson." PETA backed away.

Ditto the American SPCA, which is "strongly against him being able to immediately rejoin the NFL."

Sue Cosby, the new chief executive of the Pennsylvania SPCA, attended without enthusiasm. She thought it was fair to hear what the Eagles had to say. They didn't say much.

The SPCA's position is on its Web site: "It is neither the role nor duty of the Pennsylvania

SPCA to participate in Michael Vick's penance to atone for his participation in a dogfighting enterprise."

One popular idea floated has the Eagles matching Vick's (lowball) $1.6 million salary and spreading it around local shelters, which need it.

I like that, but should the Eagles shoulder this alone? How about - as I suggested once before - Vick prove his sincerity by donating a big chunk of his salary to shelters working with and adopting out pit bulls, the breed he so tortured and killed.

That would be a good start.

E-mail stubyko@phillynews.com or call 215-854-5977. This column usually appears Mondays and Thursdays. For recent columns:

http://go.philly.com/byko.