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Contra Costa
Humane Society

609 Gregory Lane, Suite 210, Pleasant Hill, CA   94523      (925) 279-CCHS (2247)

 

Rehoming Your Companion Animal

Oftentimes, animals are adopted with all intentions of sharing a lifetime with them.  For any number of reasons, however, it doesn't always work out that way and you may have come to a point in your life where you need to find a new and loving home for your furry friend.

Dogs and cats have a few constants in their lives, and the most important is their relationship with you.  Therefore, being re-homed can be a stressful transition for many animals.  Before deciding that re-homing your animal is your only choice, we ask that you look at the situation again to see if there are any other options.

Some of the most common reasons that animals are re-homed or surrendered to a shelter are due to training or behavioral concerns, such as jumping, vocalization, housetraining or destructiveness.   With the right combination of training and dedication though, these issues can be fixed and your companion can stay with you, where he's happiest.  While day-to-day activities certainly can lead to one not "having enough time" for the animal any longer, please remember that you made a commitment to this animal by accepting him into your care.  A little bit of your time spent training and bonding with your companion can go a long way towards his behavior.  For training resources, please call our office at (925) 279-2247, or visit the S.F. SPCA or Humane Society of the United States websites.

Moving and not having the ability to take your animal with you is another common reason that so many animals are re-homed or surrendered.  Before signing a lease or renting a space, please research those apartments or houses that will allow you to bring your companion animal.  For more information about renting with animals, please read about renting with pets through Pets911 or the HSUS .  To further search for rentable spaces within a certain area that allow companion animals, visit Apartments.com, ApartmentGuide.com, or Pets911.com. 

If these housing options are not feasible for you currently and you have to move somewhere that doesn't allow animals, try to work out an agreement with the landlord.  Oftentimes, some leniency will be granted with an increased deposit amount to ensure cleanliness of the space or by meeting with your landlord and formally introducing your animal, providing him or her with any training documentation or certificates and letters of recommendations from your animal's veterinarian or past neighbors.  Provide listings of boarding facilities for which you will place your animal should you go out of town temporarily.  For sample reference information as well as information on safely moving with your companion animal, please visit Pets911.com.

The majority of animal rescue groups do not accept surrendered animals from the public; however, there are some that will dependent upon different factors.  The only place in which you can walk in and surrender your animal is a public animal shelter.  Understand, however, that due to the large number of animals surrendered in combination with the number of stray animals picked up daily, space and time are not always guaranteed to be on your animal's side.   Your furry friend is at risk for euthanasia in many public shelters due to overpopulation.  While shelter employees try their very hardest to re-home adoptable animals, there simply aren't enough homes available for the numbers of animals they have to take in.  Please consider this and take all other options into account before coming to the decision that you have to surrender your companion.

As the need to re-home your friend may be unavoidable in certain circumstances, please contact our office for further options and advice.  We offer a Referral Program for county and local residents in which we can help to advertise your animal to the public through our website.  Before surrendering your animal, allow us to help...your furry friend is depending on you!

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"Some of the reasons given for surrendering animals seem almost unbelievable, but spend a day behind the receiving counter of an animal shelter and you will almost certainly develop a disheartening awareness of the lesser side of human nature.

"...Surrenders blatantly demonstrate some of the basic attitudes that create the need for animal shelters in the first place: a lack of commitment by some people toward the animals they have taken into their lives; a disconnection from an animal as a living, feeling being; an unwillingness to be inconvenienced by an animal's needs; surprisingly unrealistic expectations about how an animal will fit into day to day life; the quintessential attitude of disposability.

"There is a moment, when the paperwork has been completed, and the animal is being handed over to shelter staff... if you watch carefully, you can sometimes see the exact moment when the animal comprehends what is happening, when he finally realizes that his guardian is leaving and he is staying; the exact moment when the confusion in his eyes is replaced by understanding, and then turns to panic, desperation.  Sadness, that will turn to grief as the days unwind, while he waits for another chance that may or may not come."

 

From the book ‘One At A Time: A Week in an American Animal Shelter’ © 2003 No Voice Unheard,. www.NoVoiceUnheard.org.  Used with permission.

 

 

Paws for thought... Just this year alone, 3-4 million animals will be euthanized - more than a quarter-million each month, 405 each hour,       one every nine seconds.

A devastating number of unwanted and unplanned animals are born each year without the guarantee of a forever home.  Each home found for these animals means one less home for an already-alive shelter animal facing euthanasia.  If you could do something simple to help end this needless destruction, wouldn't you?

PLEASE spay, neuter, adopt and spread the word! 

We can all make a difference in the lives of these animals.