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Animal Shelter Statistics - 05-2007
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Animal Shelter Statistics - 05-2007
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Animal Services Monthly Report May, 2007 <br />4 <br />by their owner for euthanasia, feral cats, or animals that died before arriving at or while at <br />our Animal Shelter. <br />For May, there is an increase in the number of total adoptions for the month by <br />comparison wit h the same mo nth of the previous year. There is also an increase when <br />compared to the five preceding months. Using the same po ints of comparison, we can <br />see that “lives releases” are also higher for the month of May. Init iatives have been taken <br />to ensure that we can and do continue to place as many healt hy and behaviorally sound <br />animals as possible given our core responsibilit ies, available resources and the dynamics <br />of pet overpopulation. <br />Pet Demographics and Overpopulation <br />It is o ften said that pet problems are people problems, and that pet overpopulation is a <br />communit y problem. These insights very much apply to our own circumstances and they <br />help create a broader perspective in which to understand our own sheltering statist ics. <br />More specifically, the number of animals that are sheltered in a given period of time is <br />itself not caused by or a direct function of our shelt ering operations and practices. The <br />number of unwanted animals in our communit ies animals so metimes referred to as <br />“surplus” pets; the extent to which cats, rabbits and dogs alike are spayed or neutered <br />rather than allowed to remain intact with the likelihood of eventual reproduction; the <br />strength of norms and customs of responsible pet ownership; the scope and strength of <br />animal regulations and their effective enforcement; and other such “variables” are what <br />affect the number of animals that are sheltered in our own and other communit ies. <br />Month by mo nth there are significant changes in the numbers of cats, dogs and other <br />animals that are sheltered at Orange County’s Animal Shelter. This month 639 animals <br />were sheltered. By comparison, in February o f this year, 359 animals were sheltered, and <br />in August of last year 751 animals were sheltered. In very general terms, this “spread” in <br />the number of animals sheltered reflects the seasonal nature of sheltering. <br />Moreover, it should be underscored that the “live release rate” for a given time period is <br />determined by the number of animals that are sheltered as well as the absolute or total <br />number of animals that are adopted, transferred, or recovered by their owner. It may <br />well be that there is a very high percentage animals that are released alive in a given <br />mo nth but that the abso lute number is lower than in other months because of the number <br />of animals that come to the shelter. <br />Wit h respect to the month of May, for instance, a higher number of animals were released <br />alive than in April—228 versus 168; however, the percentage of live releases is lower in <br />May than in April—70 percent versus 73 percent. Quite simply, the reason for this is that <br />the number of animal sheltered was higher this month than last month.
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