USA TODAY International Edition

Shelters will never run out of pets

Americans have stepped up to clear out the cages

- Maria Puente

America’s animal shelters have been transforme­d during the COVID- 19 pandemic by surging adoptions and fosters and plummeting pet population­s. But be sure of this: Shelters will never run out of animals in need.

In fact, few shelters are empty, notwithsta­nding the cheery videos you may have seen. Most still have adoptable cats and dogs, though there might be a waiting list to get one.

The heartening news is that Americans have stepped up by the tens of thousands to adopt, foster or just clean cages at their local shelters as social distancing, combined with reduced staffing, has closed facilities to the public and sent adoption processes online.

When Dumb Friends League, a private animal shelter in Denver, put out a call for volunteers to foster dogs, cats, bunnies, guinea pigs and even horses, more than 2,200 people signed up.

“People are saying, ‘ I just really want to help and feel like I’m making a difference in some shape or form,’ “says shelter spokeswoma­n Maia Brusseau.

But they haven’t run out of animals, says Brusseau; far from it. Dumb Friends is the largest shelter in the Rocky Mountain region, caring for 21,000 animals last year. Earlier this week, there were 1,115 dogs, cats and other small animals in its care, including fosters, and that total changes “hourly,” she says.

Still, shelters and animal welfare organizati­ons have made herculean efforts to reduce their population­s since the pandemic started.

The industry moved quickly in the early days of the pandemic to adapt to new technology, such as Facebook Live virtual tours and online meet- andgreets with available pets. They hoped to spike fostering and adopting. It worked.

“One positive thing about this is that we got the word out about the shelter to people who might not have been as aware,” says Jessica Gutmann, operations manager at Santa Rosa County Animal Services in the Florida Panhandle. “I think we will be getting a lot more support from the community going forward.”

And celebritie­s are helping. Movie stars including Chris Evans keep talking about the mental- health value of their furry friends.

In a video interview with USA TODAY, the “Captain America” star was asked to share his tips for coping with quarantine. “Adopt a dog! Everyone should go out and get a dog. If you don’t have a dog in your life, especially during this time, you’re missing out,” he gushed as he panned the camera over to his mutt Dodger.

It’s no wonder that in the last month, Google searches around “adopt a pet” surged about 335% in volume, according to findings from SEMrush, a data and trends analytics company.

Are shelters really empty amid the coronaviru­s crisis?

Shelters describe themselves as empty or near empty, at least temporaril­y, based on their success at getting animals fostered or adopted quickly. But often there are remaining animals, especially dogs, who aren’t adoptable for medical or behavioral reasons, plus a steady stream of strays coming in.

The Michigan- based Bissell Pet Foundation recently partnered with 84 shelters around the country to help find homes for nearly 3,200 dogs and cats under its first pandemic- relief Empty the Shelters campaign, which offers reduced adoption fees.

When the foundation surveyed 50 of those shelters, 14% had completely emptied their cages during the campaign, while 38% reported they came close to emptying, according to foundation spokeswoma­n Bri Olson. The foundation is repeating the campaign with more shelters starting May 9.

At the Palm Beach Animal Care and Control shelter, the local CBS station filmed the “historic” day on April 15 showing rows of empty cages with scores of masked volunteers standing at the open doors and cheering.

As the shelter noted, it was one empty kennel out of three, so the shelter wasn’t entirely empty, but “just the fact we can say we have one of our kennels empty ( for the first time ever) is amazing,” spokeswoma­n Elizabeth Harfmann told the TV station.

“The shelters are never, ever completely empty of animals,” says John Welsh, spokesman for the sprawling Riverside County Animal Services Department in California, which also celebrated a temporary clear- out in one of its four shelters in early April.

But Welsh says an “empty” kennel just means there were no adoptable dogs ( meaning not quarantine­d or ill) on that day. In part, he attributed that to the shelter’s success in pushing adoptions and fosters – 1,600 so far.

“That’s a pretty insane figure – we don’t get that kind of math in a regular year,” Welsh says. “But the population is always changing daily. Our call volume is down because people are home and their dogs are not getting out, but we are always going to have animals in our shelters.”

The spike in adoption and fostering is no exaggerati­on

Jennifer Bilodeau of Cornelius, N. C., slipped into the Lake Norman Humane Society in nearby Mooresvill­e this month just before the state’s “stay- at- home” order, with an eye to adopt another cat. Eventually, she took home a black kitten with green eyes whom she named Roe.

“People have the time ( now), we’re home so why not?” Bilodeau says. “There’s no reason not to do it, considerin­g that they’re better off in your living room than in a shelter.”

At Miami- Dade Animal Services, which takes care of up to 30,000 animals a year, director Alex Munoz says the population is way down, even though the shelter continues to take in animals.

“We went from a typical 350 ( adoptable) dogs to as low as 15 dogs and we currently have 30 to 40 now,” Munoz says.

Meanwhile, he says, the foster rate surged between mid- March and mid-April. “Last year we had 62 dog fosters ( during the period) and we had 224 during the same period this year.”

So what happens when pet parents return to work?

“One of the concerns is animals currently in foster care being returned to shelters when their caregivers go back to work,” says Jim Tedford, head of the national Associatio­n for Animal Welfare Advancemen­t. “There is concern that shelter intakes will skyrocket after the pandemic.”

This is a “great fear” for people like Barbara Lipson, who runs 4Paws Rescue Team in Fairfax County, Virginia, a private rescue group that finds homes for 400 cats and kittens every year. Even before the pandemic, 4Paws required adopters to return their cats if they became unable to care for the pet because of illness, job loss or need to move.

“So normally, about 30 to 40 of our adopted cats are returned each year,” Lipson says. “COVID- 19 may double or triple that number, in addition to the cats and kittens not previously adopted that will need homes.”

 ?? SETH HARRISON/ USA TODAY NETWORK ?? Dana Rocco, manager at the Humane Society of Westcheste­r in New Rochelle, N. Y., plays with a dog.
SETH HARRISON/ USA TODAY NETWORK Dana Rocco, manager at the Humane Society of Westcheste­r in New Rochelle, N. Y., plays with a dog.

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