Windsor Star

MAKING CONNECTION­S

Shelters changing adoption process

- LINDA LOMBARDI

Jillian Behram of Burkittsvi­lle, Md., has acquired pets in just about every possible way. She found one of her cats as a stray and got the other from a “free to a good home” post on social media. Her dogs have come from a breeder, rescue groups and an animal shelter. Another one moved in with her fiancé.

Of all the formal adoption processes she’s been through, the most straightfo­rward was when she adopted Lucy, a pit bull mix, from the Washington Animal Rescue League (now Humane Rescue Alliance) in Washington, D.C., last year.

After walking through the kennel, Behram asked to meet all the female puppies from one litter. She had one in mind, and in particular didn’t want the biggest one.

But the puppies had other ideas. “To my surprise, the one I assumed would be the good match turned out to be the worst match, and the biggest one turned out to pick me,” she says. “She couldn’t stop loving on me.”

The caretaker agreed. “It was so obvious that he said, ‘that’s your dog.’ ”

There wasn’t much more to it. After a chat and some paperwork, “They took my applicatio­n, and about 20 minutes later she was mine,” she says. “I think I was there an hour and a half in total.”

Instead of having pet adopters fill out long forms and wait days for home visits and reference checks, many shelters are now moving toward more open adoption processes, which they have found to be better for both adopters and pets.

“We’ve stopped policing adopters. We try to match lifestyle with lifestyle and not be judgmental,” says Joe Elmore, CEO of the Charleston Animal Society shelter in South Carolina.

Rather than check off a list of black-and-white requiremen­ts, they look for the right fit.

“If you’re at home all day and can walk them every hour and play with them, then you can get those high-energy dogs,” he says.

If you’re gone at work 10 hours a day, that doesn’t mean you’re rejected — the shelter helps you look for an older dog who’ll be OK sleeping on the couch most of the day.

Charleston Animal Society, founded in 1874, is one of the oldest in the U.S., and serves a diverse county of about 380,000 people in urban and rural areas. They are open admission, meaning they never turn an animal away.

The change in policy has had an impact on the number of animals they save.

“We’ve seen a big decrease in euthanasia,” Elmore says. “Back in 2007 or 2008, we were putting down upward of 7,000 animals a year, both cats and dogs.”

Now it’s more like 300 or 400, including extreme medical cases they can’t save.

The idea of simpler, quick adoptions may be unnerving to some. How can you be sure these are good homes?

Emily Weiss, vice-president for research and developmen­t at the ASPCA, says there was no systematic research behind the standard questions on adoption applicatio­ns.

She developed a program for shelters called Meet Your Match that moved away from strict rules.

“The person fills out a simple survey about their lifestyle,” Weiss says.

“For instance, for cats, one of the questions is, ‘Is your home like a library, middle-of-the-road, or like a carnival?’ ” The answers are meant to open up a conversati­on about which pet might meet your expectatio­ns.

In shelters that implemente­d the program, adoptions increased and returns decreased, and follow-up studies showed no difference in quality of care. Weiss argues that this kind of process is harder to fake, so it’s actually more of a barrier to people with bad intentions.

“It’s much easier for them to do harm by simply figuring out how to fill out the applicatio­n correctly, or get their friend to come in for them,” she says.

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 ??  ?? Jillian Behram’s family sits with their dogs in Burkittsvi­lle, Md.
Jillian Behram’s family sits with their dogs in Burkittsvi­lle, Md.

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