Ed, thanks for your coverage of this. It is such a complicated issue and it seems like there's a price to be paid (by the innocent animals) no matter which route is chosen. At my local shelter, no animal is adopted out without being spayed or neutered first. That's a hard rule... We have a smaller numbers of animals to deal with now, which frees some resources. A year or two ago a painful decision was made to not renew the contract with one of the cities that we served for years- because of their large number of strays and also the lack of cooperation on the part of that police department (which actually put our ACOs in potential danger). So our shelter is no longer overflowing, but we all worry about how the animals are faring at the new shelter that now has the contract with this particular town.
I know shelters have different mandates and funding structures, and I think what that means is that our shelter has to accept anyone, if we have the contract with that town. I've heard that some shelters that only have easily-adoptable animals that are quickly placed, they achieve that because they turn away the "less desirable" animals - which means they probably are euthanized quickly so the public never sees them. My current dog is a lovable pittie who bears the scars of having been mercilessly over-bred and fought, but she is extremely sweet. At some shelters she might have been immediately put down.
Jan, thanks for the feedback on the coverage. Your comments highlight the complexity of animal care and control. I've helped a number of shelters negotiate cost recovery contracts. Let me know if I can be of assistance. Thank you for adopting and rescuing your pittie from what must have been a very difficult life into a very loving home!
Great article and very timely! Thanks for all you do with these informative articles.
Thank you, Adele! Much appreciated!
Ed, thanks for your coverage of this. It is such a complicated issue and it seems like there's a price to be paid (by the innocent animals) no matter which route is chosen. At my local shelter, no animal is adopted out without being spayed or neutered first. That's a hard rule... We have a smaller numbers of animals to deal with now, which frees some resources. A year or two ago a painful decision was made to not renew the contract with one of the cities that we served for years- because of their large number of strays and also the lack of cooperation on the part of that police department (which actually put our ACOs in potential danger). So our shelter is no longer overflowing, but we all worry about how the animals are faring at the new shelter that now has the contract with this particular town.
I know shelters have different mandates and funding structures, and I think what that means is that our shelter has to accept anyone, if we have the contract with that town. I've heard that some shelters that only have easily-adoptable animals that are quickly placed, they achieve that because they turn away the "less desirable" animals - which means they probably are euthanized quickly so the public never sees them. My current dog is a lovable pittie who bears the scars of having been mercilessly over-bred and fought, but she is extremely sweet. At some shelters she might have been immediately put down.
Jan, thanks for the feedback on the coverage. Your comments highlight the complexity of animal care and control. I've helped a number of shelters negotiate cost recovery contracts. Let me know if I can be of assistance. Thank you for adopting and rescuing your pittie from what must have been a very difficult life into a very loving home!