Shelter Gets Creative To Save Lives
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Shelter Gets Creative To Save Lives

Volunteers, social media assist in pet adoptions.

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Griz was transferred to the the Fairfax County Animal Shelter from a rural rescue partner and was adopted by Jared Nieters, Tayler Clancy and her daughter Hayden.

Since 2013, Fairfax County has been the largest jurisdiction in the United States with a placement rate of animals above 90 percent. Last year alone, nearly 2,500 animals were adopted, which is nearly double the adoptions just two years earlier.

With more than 4,500 animals coming through its doors in 2014, the shelter implements creative ways to find homes for the many homeless cats, dogs, guinea pigs, rabbits and other small animals. Here are just a few of the ways the shelter is finding new ways to save more lives:

  • 150 foster families provide temporary housing to pets needing a break from the shelter. In addition to caring for puppies and kittens as well as animals recovering from surgery or illness, foster families can take an animal into their home for shorter time periods. Fosters take dogs on one-hour field trips or can take a dog home for the weekend, to give it a much-needed break from the stress of the shelter environment. Older cats sometimes wait many months to find a permanent home, so foster families take them home for 30 days of TLC while they’re waiting.
  • In May of 2013, the shelter started a Facebook group. Today, with more than 20,000 people following the shelter on Facebook, Instagram and Twitter, more than half the shelter’s adopters say they first saw their pet or the shelter itself on social media. In the past, a pet with a special medical need would have previously waited months for an adopter. Now that same pet usually finds a home within days of its pictures and story are shared on social media.
  • The shelter has 300 volunteers who give daily love, enrichment and exercise to homeless pets. Dogs play in groups, go on off-site walks, and get kennel breaks four or five times every day. Treat-dispensing toys, stuffed and frozen Kong toys and other enrichment items keep shelter dogs busy throughout the day. Cats and small animals get to enjoy play time in one of the shelter’s cat rooms every day and are constantly cared-for by dedicated volunteers. All of this helps shelter pets be happy, healthy and ready to meet their new families.

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Griz is now the well-known shop mascot at Jared Nieters’ Haymarket Bicycles LLC.

Because the shelter has been so successful at placing animals, there are sometimes empty spaces on the adoption floor. Whenever there is space, they take in animals from under-resourced and overburdened shelters in D.C. and rural Virginia. In 2014, nearly 500 dogs and cats were transferred in to the shelter, where they were adopted to loving homes.

In addition to adoptions, the shelter offers classes for adults and kids, dog obedience, Scout badge programs, birthday parties, book club, and a pet loss support group. To learn more about shelter programs or to view adoptable animals, visit www.fairfaxcounty.gov/animalshelter.

Want to know how to help your local shelter? In addition to volunteering, fostering and donating, all shelters in the area have Facebook pages. By following your local shelter, you can help spread the word about all the great pets waiting to meet their forever families.