Florida saved 6000 more dogs and cats in 2020 than Previous Year – Ponte Vedra Recorder

Posted: July 16, 2021 at 1:11 pm

Best Friends Animal Society,a leading animal welfare organization, has released its sixth annual pet lifesaving dataset,whichgives a national overview of the number of dogs and cats that enterand exitshelters each year.

It also includesa state-by-state no-kill priority rankingin whichFloridaisfourth.

Best Friends measures shelter lifesaving with a metric calledsave rate.

A 90% save rate is the nationally recognized benchmark to be considered no-kill, factoring that approximately 10 percent of pets who enter shelters have medical or behavioral circumstances that warrant humane euthanasia rather than killing for other reasons, such as lack of space.

In 2020,283,942 dogs and cats enteredFloridashelters and234,681were saved, giving the state an aggregate save rate of82.65%.

In the same year, an estimated55.92% of state shelters measured above the 90% benchmark. Those that were below it needed to save an estimated24,289more healthyor treatableanimals to makeFloridano-kill. A stateis considered to beno-kill when every brick-and-mortar shelter in the state has a save rate of 90% or higher.

Florida has many animal sheltering agencies doing tremendous work within theirlocalcommunities, saidTiffany Deaton, strategist for the Best Friends Animal Society East Region. They have implemented best practices to save the animals in their care and keeppets out of shelters andwith their families when possible.If we can take what we have learned from thesemodel agencies and share that knowledge and those resources with other communities and sheltersin Florida,we canmake the Sunshine State a safe place for animals in shelters.

By comparison, in 2019,361,478animals entered state shelters and282,021were saved for an aggregate save rate of78%. At the time, an estimated53.29%of shelters were no-kill and those that were below it needed to save an estimated45,503more animals.

This was a monumental year for cats and dogs in Americas shelters, said Julie Castle, CEO of Best Friends Animal Society. We saw communities, shelters and individuals step up for animals in ways we couldnt have imagined, and now we are closer than ever before to achieving our goal of no-kill by 2025.

The organization has identified the top six states where it says pets need to be saved: Texas, California, North Carolina, Florida, Alabama and Louisiana, which make up 50 percent of the dogs and cats still being killed in the nation. Although they continue to represent the largest lifesaving gaps, these states have seen significant progress in lifesaving over the past year.

The COVID-19 pandemic impacted this years data, as many shelters or services had to partially close or reduce services. Communities and individuals filled that gap through volunteering, fostering and adopting. As a result, fewer pets entered shelters and more animals lives were saved.

This years progress has been exceptional, from what we have seen with community support and involvement and the lifesaving numbers as a result. It is crucial that we build on this momentum to keep pets out of shelters and in loving homes where they belong. This is how we will get to no-kill, Castle said.

Nationally, about 347,000 cats and dogs were killed in Americas shelters in 2020, down from 625,000 in 2019. This is the largest yearly reduction in dogs and cats killed in the nations shelters (44.5%) to date, putting the nation at an 83 percent save rate.

"Since we announced our no-kill goal the number of cats and dogs killed in shelters has decreased by 76%, down from about 1.5 million in 2016, said Castle. This is incredible progress, but we must never lose sight that there are stillover 950 cats and dogs killed every day just because they do not have a safe place to call home.

For the past six years, Best Friends has spearheaded a one-of-a-kind extensive data collection process that involved coordinated outreach to every shelter in America followed by additional research, data analysis, and technology development.

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Florida saved 6000 more dogs and cats in 2020 than Previous Year - Ponte Vedra Recorder

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