The NAIA Shelter Project is a unique and invaluable research program dedicated to understanding shelter population trends,
reducing euthanasia of adoptable pets, improving pet health and welfare, reducing infectious and zoonotic disease transmission, and fighting consumer fraud.
Not exact matches
Pet Gotcha Day!TM exists to increase
pet adoptions and
reduce the incidence
of euthanasia nationwide through empowering animal welfare organizations with revolutionary 360 - degree video technology that will engage, delight & motivate potential adopters as they watch immersive videos
of adoptable pets.
It's Friday morning and Dawn Kemper, co-founder
of Young at Heart Senior Pet Adoptions in suburban Chicago, is running a mile a minute, multitasking, seeing to every detail as she readies the rollout
of the rescue's new program, Club Grand Paw, the latest embodiment
of the organization's mission «to rescue and rehome senior dogs and cats, to educate the public on the benefits
of adopting older
pets and their care, and to
reduce the
euthanasia rate for
adoptable senior
pets.»
Spaying and neutering can
reduce pet overpopulation to a level that can cease the
euthanasia of healthy,
adoptable animals.
«With our new national grant program and our ongoing efforts to make affordable spay / neuter available to the public, PetSmart Charities is addressing the root cause
of pet homelessness and this will have a national impact on
reducing shelter intake and, ultimately, the
euthanasia of adoptable pets.»
Young at Heart rescues 100 %
of our senior
pets from open - door shelters,
reducing the
euthanasia rate for
adoptable senior
pets at area shelters.
UAAC has been dedicated to
reducing the tragedies
of pet overpopulation, the
euthanasia of healthy
adoptable pets and animal suffering since 1983.
Over the past twenty years, high volume sterilization has become the accepted response to
reduce animal shelter intake and the needless
euthanasia of healthy,
adoptable pets.
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Reduce the number
of homeless
pets in Oklahoma and the occurrence
of euthanasia of adoptable animals
To rescue and rehome senior dogs and cats, to educate the public on the benefits
of adopting older
pets and their care, and to
reduce the
euthanasia rate for
adoptable senior
pets.
UAAC has been dedicated to
reducing the tragedies
of pet overpopulation, the
euthanasia of healthy
adoptable pets, and ending animal suffering since 1983.
It is an irrefutable fact - spaying and neutering is the most effective way to
reduce pet overpopulation and the subsequent
euthanasia of adoptable pets in shelters across the country.
Scarlett, J.M. Are you doing all you can to
reduce euthanasia of healthy,
adoptable pets?