Building from the Asilomar Accords (a system developed in 2004 to standardize the way shelters track their live - release rates), Shelter Animals Count is a partnership between major animal welfare organizations (including The HSUS) that encourages
standardizing shelter data and increasing transparency.
Not exact matches
Standardized and transparent
data - reporting practices once seemed a long way off, but Roach is excited to see how a new national database of animal
shelter statistics could change that.
Through its website, the project collects and
standardizes national
shelter and rescue
data in a searchable database.
To achieve this, the team developed
standardized statistical recordkeeping and reporting that
shelters could adopt for accurate reporting of
data.
The goal of the MAC
Shelter Statistics Task Force is to make
standardized, high quality statewide
data on homeless animals available to animal welfare programs and state and local policy decision - makers.