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Report: Over 51,000 Dogs Euthanized in US as Shelter Intake Rises.

Euthanasia Rates at U.S. Animal Shelters on the Rise

Euthanasia rates at U.S. animal ⁢shelters have reportedly increased this year, with about 51,000 dogs being put to death as⁣ animal shelters struggle with “overcapacity” of stray‌ and owner-surrendered⁤ pets.

The number of dogs euthanized at U.S. animal shelters increased by 37 percent in the first half⁣ of this ⁤year compared to 2022, according to a report by Axios.⁢ The report cited the Shelter Animals⁤ Count (SAC) database, which stated in its July report that without significant intervention,‍ animal intakes at shelters across the country in the second half of the year might hit a three-year high, with outcomes still not keeping pace.

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The SAC report highlighted that “owner relinquishment rates remained unchanged for cats‌ (17 percent), but ⁣dogs⁣ saw a steep decrease over the three-year period (25 percent in ⁣2021‍ to 18 percent in‌ 2023). However, not all organization​ types are seeing this same trend.”

“The gap of cats and dogs waiting for an⁣ outcome reached 7 percent in ⁢the first half of​ the year, ⁣leading to an increase in animal populations at already burdened shelters, rescues, and government-funded organizations in every region ⁢of the U.S,” the report added.

SAC‌ emphasized that animal organizations are struggling with “overcapacity status” and urgently need community support. For instance, the Aurora animal shelter ⁣has posted on its website that it ‌is currently unable to accept any owner-surrendered dogs due to their⁤ dog kennels reaching capacity.

“As we look back at the second quarter of 2023, one issue stands out to me⁢ more than the rest: the continuing decline of animal ⁣transfers between organizations,” said SAC executive ⁢director Stephanie Filer. “In Q1, ‌we saw some hope that the bottleneck in transfers may be ‍starting to ease. Unfortunately, that hope was short-lived. ⁤Now in Q2, transfers in and out of organizations‍ have hit their lowest point in the past three years.”

The Denver animal shelter has euthanized 866 dogs and cats ⁤as of August, the highest number in five years. Shelter director Melanie Sobel explained that high inflation rates ​and affordable ⁤housing shortages affect people’s ability to own a pet.

“It’s very, very difficult to find an affordable place, let alone find an affordable place that allows animals,” Ms.⁤ Sobel told Axios.

Ms. Sobel also stated that behavioral issues in adolescent dogs ‍whose owners kept them indoors during ​the​ pandemic​ also‍ contributed to the rise in euthanasia rates at animal‌ shelters. According to her, the⁢ shelter would normally ⁢transfer behavioral-issue dogs ​to partner shelters, ​but as ​these partners are currently at full capacity, the only remaining‌ choice is euthanizing these dogs.



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