Pets
Shelters Bulging With Cats And Dogs As Adopt A Shelter Pet Day Nears
The number of cats and dogs that end up in shelters is increasing; so is euthanasia as pandemic pet demand falls and inflation persists.

ACROSS AMERICA — Here’s a number to keep in mind on National Adopt A Shelter Pet Day on Sunday: 454,233. That’s the number of cats and dogs shelters nationwide took in during the first three months of the year.
The national database Shelter Animals Count keeps a running tally of abandoned and surrendered pets, based on reports from local shelters around the country. Euthanasia rates are rising with the increase in the number of cats and dogs that wind up in shelters.
In some cases, the rate at which healthy dogs and cats are put down has more than doubled, according to a Scripps News Service investigation by reporters Clayton Sandell and Rachel Gold earlier this year.
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The census for Jan. 1-March 31 includes intake reports from 1,267 shelters, according to the shelter census. About 50,380 of the more than 454,000 animals were euthanized or did not survive for other reasons.
The number of cats and dogs taken in at animal shelters reached a high for the year in March, according to the Shelter Animals Count report. The actual number is likely much higher, as only about half of the nation’s 3,500 animal shelters filed intake reports.
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In March, about 60,000 of the cats and dogs taken in by shelters were strays, but about 45,000 of them were surrendered by their owners.
According to the Scripps investigation, the reasons euthanasia rates are increasing are complex, ranging from logistical problems like a lack of space and staffing to decreasing demand for pets with the end of pandemic restrictions and the cost of keeping a pet amid high inflation.
“As people have returned to normal, and animals are staying behind,” Stephanie Filer, the CEO of Shelter Animals Count, told the Scripps reporters. “And so that whole system has essentially bottlenecked.”
National Adopt A Shelter Pet Day is an informal observance every year on April 30 to raise awareness of the million of cats, dogs and other pets waiting for adoption.
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