The Morning Journal (Lorain, OH)

Adopting a pet can ease this isolation

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During the current period of enforced isolation and social distancing, you may be craving warmth, companions­hip and plain old physical closeness. You may yearn to snuggle on the couch, feel valued and talk honestly about your practical problems and deep anxieties. Did you know dogs are attentive listeners?

Animal shelters are among the many industries adapting to coronaviru­s regulation­s and stay-at-home orders.

If you’re considerin­g adopting or fostering a pet, you can do most of the groundwork online.

Has the prospect occurred to you?

Why not get a pet?

If you think YouTube cat videos are a treat, imagine a live performanc­e all day, every day.

Granted, a lot of the spectacle will involve sleeping.

But as TV personalit­y Jane Pauley once noted, “You can’t look at a sleeping cat and be tense.”

An important note: The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention says, “We do not have evidence that companion animals, including pets, can spread COVID-19.”

If you aren’t ready for a permanent arrangemen­t, you can take a pet on a temporary basis, known as fostering.

That frees shelter space and allows the animal to get used to life in a real home.

If you’re new to pet ownership, or not quite sure, you can think of this arrangemen­t as a trial run to learn whether it’s right for you.

At worst, you’ll serve as a bridge between the dog or cat and its permanent placement. At best, you’ll fall hopelessly in love.

PAWS Chicago founder Paula Fasseas says that organizati­on has establishe­d a virtual adoption process, which allows interested adopters to browse animals online and talk to an adoption counselor without leaving their homes.

If you take a pet home and change your mind, you can get a refund on fees, which range from $25 to $400.

With all due respect to Garfield, cats are cheaper to adopt.

Other rescue facilities have shifted from regular visiting hours to meet-and-greet appointmen­ts.

Not only might this be a perfect time for people to adopt or foster, it may be a time when saviors are especially needed.

Brian Krajewski, chairman of the Animal Services Committee for DuPage County, says that in periods of economic trouble, it’s not unusual to see an increase in the number of animals being handed over by owners or simply dumped by the side of the road.

“It happens when people lose their jobs, or they can’t afford to keep their pet, or they have to move and can’t take their pet with them,” he says. Owners who are quarantine­d or hospitaliz­ed by COVID-19 may be unable to care for their pets or to find someone else to do it.

His agency and its rescue shelter partners can use help in accommodat­ing these animals.

If you decide to take on this humane task, you’ll have the satisfacti­on of knowing you made a worthwhile contributi­on during a time of national crisis.

And, from the animal you take in, you’ll get an endless supply of gratitude.

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