With the tragic number of shelter animals losing their
lives for lack of homes, we hope that people seeking a pet will adopt from a shelter or rescue organization.
On the plus side, this means they have high adoption numbers because of their sheer volume, but they still get put down
for lack of homes at a high rate.
With the fall in shelter intake and the increase in the human population and the number of owned pets, and the new ways of looking at cats, there is no reason why any dog or cat has to be killed
today for lack of a home.
How can pet overpopulation be a myth when more than 9,000 dogs and cats die in shelters every
day for lack of homes?
Please show compassion and abolish the gas chambers in favor of the EBI until there is no longer a need to euthanize any
pets for lack of a home.
Data suggests overall satisfaction with homes and boomers» desire to stay put as top reasons
for the lack of homes on the market
There are lots of greyhounds in need of homes and thousands are still being euthanized every
year for lack of homes.
In many instances, people who purchase a puppy or a kitten no longer want the animal once he or she has grown, so many of these adult dogs and cats also wind up in shelters and are often
euthanized for lack of homes.
Millions of friendly, healthy pets, including a large percentage of kittens, puppies, and purebreds, are euthanized every year in
shelters for lack of homes.
I wish more people understood that «No More Homeless Pets» means that pets will not have to be
killed for lack of homes.
literally......
for lack of homes.
Every citizen can help San Antonio achieve No Kill — where no healthy, adoptable pet will ever have to be euthanized for lack of space at a shelter or
for lack of a home.
But the truth is, for every animal they allow to be born, they are causing one to die
for lack of a home.
When people in the sheltering and rescue field think about the millions of cats who are euthanized every year
for lack of a home, the topic of reuniting lost pet cats with their owners may seem trivial by comparison.
The benefits to the thousands of homeless pets who are euthanized each year
for lack of a home can not be overstated.
Slowly, over the past five or six years, university studies have put forth a different picture: it's not the puppies, they say, it's the adult dogs that are picked up as strays or surrendered by owners that populate shelters and die
for lack of a home.
National figures indicate that about half of the animals in shelters must be euthanized
for lack of homes.
The vision of the Bakersfield SPCA, a non-profit organization, is that one day no healthy companion animal will be euthanized
for lack of a home, lack of space or lack of compassion.
It is my hope, and my goal, to do what I can to reduce to zero the number of dogs that die
for lack of homes.
The good news is that sharing your home, life, and love with one or more feline friends has many benefits for you, as well as for cats who would otherwise be euthanized
for lack of a home.