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Rescue Pets Face Euthanasia — Support Shelters in Desperate Need
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Sponsor: The Animal Rescue Site
Help relieve overcrowded shelters and save lives by taking steps to be a more responsible pet parent and bring down the homeless pet population!
Shelters across the United States do important work of keeping animals off the streets. But many of those shelters are filled to capacity and must turn animals away.
Over 6 million dogs and cats are put in shelters every year. Hundreds of thousands of them don’t make it out alive1.
Early on during the pandemic, shelters saw record adoptions. However, people who now are returning to the office and taking long-awaited vacations are surrendering those pandemic pets2.
At the same time, many shelters helping dogs, cats, rabbits, and other pets in need have been hurt by staffing shortages—resulting in reduced operations, fewer animal intakes, and fewer major adoption events3.
The pandemic has also broken key links in the transport chain that takes animals from the streets to their new homes.
“You’re not providing the service that you used to be able to provide. And in our terms, that means getting animals out of the shelter alive,” said Julie Castle, the CEO of Best Friends Animal Society, an organization that keeps track of euthanization data across the U.S4.
A survey by Best Friends Animal Society found that 87% of 187 U.S. shelters polled were understaffed5. Coupled with a shortage of veterinarians in the U.S, these conditions are putting serious pressure on underserved communities like those in rural areas. Spay and neuter services in many U.S. regions were ruled non-essential during the pandemic, further extending the backlog of animals that must be treated before they can go to families.
The spay-neuter backlog prevents shelters from getting animals ready as efficiently. Hundreds of thousands of animals will face euthanization this year if action is not taken to find them foster or forever homes, or move them to no-kill shelters.
It is not only possible for individuals like you to help being shelter pet euthanization rates down by taking action, it is also the most humane solution to these unnecessary deaths6. Thanks to efforts from caring people like you, a growing number of communities around the nation have even gained the “no kill” classification by achieving a 90% live release rate at their municipal shelters7.
There several other ways you can help your community reach the same level of care for animals. Learn them below and sign the Pledge to Support Shelter Pets!