Owners are leaving more than homes
Animal rescue groups report that pets are being brought in because of the weak economy and foreclosures
Date published: 8/28/2008
BY BILL FREEHLING
Animal shelters across the country and in the Fredericksburg area are reporting a sad fallout of the economic downturn--more pets being brought in and fewer being adopted.
With foreclosure rates going up in the wake of a severe housing slump, some people are having to move out of homes and into places that don't allow pets. Others can't afford to pay for their pets' food and medical care.
"That's a nationwide phenomenon," said Nancy Peterson, issues specialist with The Humane Society of the United States. "When people are having a rough time it can be rough for pets, as well."
The people who run petfinder .com, which lets visitors search almost 300,000 pets to adopt, did a survey on this topic a few months ago. The survey went to Petfinder's nearly 12,000 adoptions groups--including animal rescue organizations and shelters.
About 49 percent of respondents said they'd received pets this year whose owners' homes had been foreclosed, said Petfinder Vice President Kim Saunders. Fifty-seven percent said they're seeing a drop in adoptions this year.
"All of that adds up to our shelters being even more overcrowded than they normally are," Saunders said.
That's the case at the Greater Fredericksburg Area SPCA, said executive director Debra Joseph. She estimates that her Fredericksburg facility has received about 25 percent more pets this year, in large part because people can't afford to keep them anymore.
Joseph said the local SPCA, which is for now the area's only no-kill animal shelter, has a waiting list of about 80 dogs that the facility can't currently accommodate. It'll help when the SPCA moves from its 3,000-square-foot home to a 16,000-square-foot space in Spotsylvania County early next year.
Bill Hoyt and his wife, Moira, recently announced plans to start an SPCA in Stafford County on a 10.2-acre property on Andrew Chapel Road that formerly was home to the Brooke Nursing Center. Hoyt cited foreclosure and economic issues when explaining his reasons for forming the shelter.
Date published: 8/28/2008
|