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Saving Them All: At What Cost?

Saving Them All: At What Cost?

No Kill. This is a buzzword in the rescue and shelter community. But to the majority of said community, it is an offensive term. The use of this term implies that all else but no-kill aficionados are to be scorned. No one wants euthanasia. But the sad reality is that it’s not possible to save them all responsibly.

The above paragraph will cause a huge uproar among some rescue circles. But not the responsible ones. Don’t misunderstand me. All lives are worthwhile. But there are worse fates than euthanasia. Warehousing is sadly common among the save them all fans. What does warehousing mean? Unfortunately, it entails keeping animals technically alive but with little regard to quality of life. This can include crating or kenneling for long periods without human interaction and without enrichment. Endless hours without physical exercise or mental stimulation is not healthy for any living being. Why would it be okay for an animal? Is alive really better in this circumstance? Would the animal experiencing this agree with the no kill crowd if asked? I tend to doubt it.

Picture of dogs inside a shelterYet there are ‘rescuers’ who only care about whether a dog is alive. They consider this a win. Dog after dogs are taken in by some rescues, into foster homes that already have too many to meet all their needs. Dogs are crated, with little interaction and exercise. Their emotional and physical needs are only marginally met. They spend long hours with little to do. In other scenarios, they are placed into any home that offers, with little to no screening to determine suitability. These homes often are fickle in their preferences and when the dog isn’t perfect, the dog is given up for the next ‘save’. These dogs go from home to home, often being given away with no regard to where they land. The emotional toll this takes on an animal can be permanently damaging. The lucky ones find a place that is home for life, hopefully a home that is good to them. The unlucky ones are victims of abuse and neglect, worse off than their life wherever they started from.

Rescue can be an addiction, like so many other addictions that cause the people acting on them to feel good when they ‘win’. Numbers are more important than quality to so many. The need is for self approval and self importance, not the improvement of a dog’s life. Rescuers patting themselves on the back, the worse the story, the more attention they get for the ‘save’. Then the ‘saved’ dogs get shipped off to some foster home that is no better than a warehouse and the hell begins anew.

I am truly sorry if this comes off as cynical but it’s a sad reality for so many more than it should be. This doesn’t mean that the most shared stories of dogs in dire straits are bad rescuers. Each situation is individual and most rescuers who take in dogs who were victims of terrible circumstances are just trying to do a good thing. But there are many others who are looking for their 15 minutes, less about the dog, more about them.

These are the same individuals and groups who think every dog can be saved, no matter the cost to the rescue, the community and the other dogs who will die because of the effort to save one. Let me preface this by saying that I will be the first one to offer to help when a dog with a committed family wants assistance with modifying his or her issues. A committed family willing to implement proper management and a proper behavior modification protocol in order to make things safer for the community and their dog is to be commended. That is best case scenario for a successful behavior modification.

The same type of issue in a dog who is available for adoption is not going to be as workable in many scenarios. Consistency makes for a successful outcome. Consistency is often lacking in rescue and shelter scenarios, when the issue is severe. Situations such as severe stranger aggression or severe dog aggression pose a danger to so many. Placing a dog who has already killed another dog and seriously attacked others, leaves a very small and unrealistic criteria for a successful adoption. Yet there are people who rally for dogs like this to be shipped to some imaginary unicorn location where they can be ‘fixed’ fast. That isn’t even a possibility yet some ‘trainers’ make such promises.

I hear these ‘rescuers’ say that human errors caused the dog’s issues. They did indeed but we are not placing dogs with aliens. Until we accept that we are all humans and all capable of these errors and stuff happens, then we will continue to make mistakes. These mistakes mean that we place dogs who are simply not fixable in the situations they are in, into a household unequipped to handle them.

I see post after post on Facebook about dogs that ‘need some work’, just needing a place they can go with ‘no other dogs, no cats, no kids, no men’, etc. I see post after post about dogs that need to ‘live with a single woman who never has visitors’. Sure, these homes exist but they are few and far between and they are the ones who already have that dog. There are people taking in dogs like this who have other dogs, who crate and rotate dogs in different parts of the house. This is a very stressful way to live. Accidents happen. They really do. Humans will be human. And then we are back to the lack of appropriate enrichment for the dog with the issue and once again, quality of life rears it’s ugly head.

Lest you declare me as advocating for mass genocide of dogs, I am wholeheartedly supportive of proper attempts at behavior modification with the appropriate commitment level, with the dogs that fit these descriptions. If there is a place where this can happen and given the proper attention, then almost every dog deserves a chance. But here is where the attention to common sense and reality must come into play. If you have done everything that could be done and the dog you are trying to help is not improving, despite appropriate attempts at behavior modification, medication, vet screenings for organic causes and people and/or animals in your care have been seriously injured, then you owe it to those people and other animals to take a long hard look at the situation. No one should be pressured to not give up just because others don’t share their own common sense. Pressure from others to ‘try just one more thing’ causes guilt on the part of the person trying to help. That is hardly helpful.

Every life is worth putting an effort to save. But an effort should not involve placing so many others in danger in any given foster home or the public at large. It also should not be mean that perfectly lovely dogs with wonderful temperaments in overcrowded shelters be placed in danger of euthanasia simply because of space. What about their right to being saved? I realize that this is an extremely controversial subject and emotions run very high on both sides. But we all need to stop and realize just how many good dogs are dying because of our choices. We need to consider quality of life and not just being alive.

Everyone has different personal beliefs about life after we leave this earth. I don’t expect anyone else to agree with mine. But mine are that this is only but one realm of our existence and that nothing is to be feared about leaving this realm. I believe that leaving this realm doesn’t mean an end to consciousness. Perhaps that helps me make hard decisions easier than some who don’t share this belief. In any case, I believe we have an obligation to the animals in our care to do the best that we can by them while we are with them and that includes letting go when we should. Peace to you all in your own decisions on this subject. Feel free to share your thoughts on this subject in the spaces below but I ask that you please keep it classy.

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22 Comments

  1. Mary Withrow May 10, 2014

    I agree 100%. As someone who has worked to rescue, enrich, rehab, rehome, improve existing conditions for dogs into the thousands, and someone who believes life is sacred in all forms and at MOST times, we need to remember there are times when we have to look at nothing more than quality of life. Three words, quality of life. A dog immediately comes to mind, one that I will never forget, one that literally makes my heart ache, yes she’s alive, I worked to get her to a place where she could “live.” She was sad looking so she had a “sympathy factor” if you will, she was only 2 years old, with a “rap sheet” as long as my street. I will admit she had been exposed via social media, so there was pressure (that I will never succumb to again) from the public to “do right by her.” Everyone was so happy when the decision was made to move her to a place where she could EXIST. Yes it’s nice and beautiful. Her existence, her life is living in a pen, alone. She is outside for the most part, volunteers walk her, they love her, but is this fair? Living in a pen alone? Was this doing right by HER? I get pics sometimes and you would think they would make me happy. No they keep me up at night. What did I do? She will never sleep on a bed, she will never have the love of several or even one person in the comforts of a house, she will never have someone to just let her lay on a couch or sit and watch out the window. But she is alive. And she’s only 2 years old. This is her existence for a very long time. What have I done to her? I don’t take euthanasia lightly, if it doesn’t ever rip my heart up I gotta pack it in and do something else. Because of where I work, what I do on a national level as well, I expose myself to a lot of dogs, I have to say goodbye to many. That’s after exhausting every possible way of trying to get them to a place where they could be rehomed. For them I fight harder, I work with more passion. When I think that the one I kept alive is the one that makes my heart hurt more than the ones I sometimes held as they left this world, it really makes me think about what is fair to the DOG, and only the dog, and as long as I do this work I will never do to another dog what I did to this girl. I learned so much from her, and I know this is only MY opinion, my experience, but if I had to do it again I would not have “saved” her, I would have let her and whatever little things in her head or possible trauma from abuse in her past, made her behave the way she did be at peace in the next “realm.” Thank you for letting me share my thoughts and my experience. Excellent blog.

  2. Frank May 10, 2014

    Mary I agree with this article completely and I do have three rescues that adapted to me and each other almost immediately but that is the luck of the draw

  3. Mary Lou Buoymaster May 10, 2014

    If they don’t try to save them all, then none will be saved!

  4. Priscilla May 10, 2014

    As a shelter worker at a large volume municipal shelter, I whole heartedly agree!!!!!!

  5. Jamie May 12, 2014

    11yrs at my current shelter, truer words were never spoken. Worst part is to work under someone who is number based and watching the suffering of the staff and adopters. Nice piece, i will share with the powers that be. God bless!

  6. Julie May 14, 2014

    Very well spoken. I have worked in rescue as a volunteer and employee of an animal shelter. I have been in almost all situations you mentioned, believing all dogs could be saved. We adopted a beautiful dog that was great with people but would continually attack our other house dogs. Not every dog is rehabilitatable, and at what expense do we pretend that they are. We are seeing more aggression in dogs because of some of the situations you mention, too much solitary time, lack of exercise, lack of quality of life. We must ask, months of solitary confinement, how would that make you feel?
    Thanks for speaking up.

  7. Aniak Dog Lady May 15, 2014

    You have written a wonderful article I am so glad it was shared with me. I agree with you thinking. We are on this earth to learn how to be compassionate, nonjudgmental and logical. As we all know, some people are just too set in their beliefs thus it stands to reason dogs can be also. I believe it is kinder to take away the fear that causes wrong behavior, if that means kindly euthanizing rather than a life of incarceration or beating or being taken out and shot out of anger that life is ended calmly, set free, so the next life can truly begin clean and fresh.

  8. Brian McKenna May 19, 2014

    I agree with the point that generally the dogs failings are actually human error. That does not change the fact that you now have an unplaceable dog. Whether the source of dog errors be human , dog, earth or spiritually initiated the end result is the dog in question and it has to be handled as such. Resources are finite, and skilled rehabilitators are fewer. Once due diligence I’d done; in the name of that dog, the people involved , and the recoverable dogs that need the attention we should euthanize the dogs with no reasonable chance of normal placement.

  9. Jen May 19, 2014

    Excellent read–thank you for pointing out the problems inherent in the current “rescue” trend. Unfortunately, we often don’t hear about “saved” animals who’ve ended up in bad situations until it’s too late, and they’re in the news. Social media has turned it into some sort of phenomenon (who *isn’t* a “rescuer” these days…) and hoarders and others can acquire as many animals as they please with a click of their mouse.

  10. Julia May 20, 2014

    Excellent article. I thought I was the odd one out until I read this. I took a big interest in no-kill rescue dogs initially and I still do. I adore and love all dogs but it’s unrealistic to think we can save them all. There are just too many of them. Maybe we should be focusing on the root source of the problem and pressuring our governments and councils to illegalise puppy farms and to subsidise de-sexing fees to try and reduce the excessive dog and cat populations. Every life is worth trying to save BUT unfortunately these shelters are so overcrowded. Yes, there are a lot of lovely dogs with wonderful temperaments in these shelters that could be re-homed safely but there are also many other dogs with behavioural problems that need correction and some that are beyond correction usually because of the inadequacy of their care in their early life. It’s unrealistic to think that we can save all of these creatures. Clearly though, it would be far better if the population of dogs and cats was controlled and managed in the first place and the incidence of unwanted animals was rare rather than commonplace.

  11. THE DOG BARKER May 20, 2014

    IHAVE BEEN RESCUEING DOGS in Homestead, FL. for almost 10 yrs. and I felt everyone of your words, which I could never write so well. I APPLAUD YOU!!!

    YOU’VE GOT GUTS AND GREAT WORDS, WELL PRESENTED THOUGHTS.

    BEST REGARDS, THE DOG BARKER …. RAH … RAH … RAH … george arellano

  12. Spayzilla May 20, 2014

    Agree! when we make the story about euthanasia, the mission becomes rescue, with little regard for reality.
    We need to make the story about shelter intakes and let the mission become prevention of unwanted litters through spay/neuter. That’s how to make a difference and save lives!

  13. martina May 20, 2014

    Thank you for saying what so many of us feel

  14. DC June 7, 2014

    Thank you. When people ask if no kill is a reality yet, I ask if they can take on a heartworm positive hound type who will bite a child. IF they say yes, I tell them with enough people like them, it can be real in the near future. If they say “No, but couldn’t you….” I say, why couldn’t you?

  15. Cami May 4, 2015

    I agree that you can not save them all but also believe it depends on your expectations for the dog. I know of a couple dogs that live at a rescue and all of their needs are being met. Are they placable no but they are happy where they are. I do not believe in euthnizing for space. Now if they were scared and not comfortable then yes.

  16. Linda Guerin May 12, 2015

    I agree 100% This was very well written. I feel bad for some of these dogs that get passed around and past around and passed around. Especially if they dog fight’s or bite’s. All that passing around is not good for any dog. Breeder for 43 years, and yes, I put a dog against dog fighter to sleep. She was one of my top dog in agility, and also one of my puppies. So don’t think I didn’t care. But I would not put any person in danger with a problem dog. It is not fare to the person taking the dog. (Just my opinion) . Linda

  17. Diane May 16, 2015

    I agree with this blog. However, as Julia (May 20, 2014) states the root of the problem is overpopulation. More time and resources need to be placed into shutting down puppy mills, and I would take it one step further to ALL breeders, even the so called “good” ones. Why with good dogs being euthanized from lack of homes would any responsible person breed dogs? I am a shelter volunteer and see many expensive breeders dogs with “excellent bloodlines” end up in shelters. Diane

  18. Deb September 29, 2017

    I also feel that way with the really big surgeries to save an animal. I feel so bad for the animal but yet I have to look at how many more could have been saved with the expense. I know that would be unpopular for a lot of rescuers but I think it is a matter of triage and doing the most you can for the most animals.

  19. Debby McMullen September 30, 2017

    I don’t agree with this. It depends on the individual rescue or shelter and whether they have the funds at least mostly or are fundraising all of it. A local shelter goes above and beyond and spares no expense when appropriate and by that, I mean nothing less than an owner would do. Same with a local rescue group. I am fine with that. It’s different if a rescue or shelter has mo money and are continually taking in animals that need surgeries that only have a small chance of saving them at a high cost.

  20. Nadja Adolf January 13, 2019

    No, the problem isn’t responsible breeders – that is the hobby and standard breeders. Very few “rescue dogs” are purebred, not even “purebred” as defined by a puppy producer who breeds strictly to market demand.

    I will not have another rescue dog. I grew up with an unmanageable pound dog my parents brought home because he was “cheap.” He also combined the worst characteristics of a terrier with the worst characteristics of a beagle. A friend dropped by with her “shelter dog” which had allegedly been health checked that very day when she “adopted” it in Multnomah County – the dog was visibly ill and had distemper. I have also dealt with a “rescue” who had Spaniel Rage syndrome – just what you want to bring home to the kiddies.

    Rescues and shelters have a bad name because they indulge in wishful thinking rather than responsible animal care. Too many vicious or unmanageable dogs are being foisted on the public. Unfortunately, the public doesn’t understand the real meaning of code words such as “no children” or “only pet” and may not be paying attention when the neighbor kids walk by while the front door is open, or what the dog gets up to when being walked past another dog.

    I have dogs for specific purposes. Dogs that have been bred for hundreds, if not thousands, of years to perform specific tasks. No thanks, but pit bulls are not good herding dogs and Chihuhuas make rotten live stock guardians or hunting dogs. Not all dogs are created equal – there are very real differences that are rapidly apparent if you have a dog for a specific purpose.

    The reason we need breeders despite allegedly “great” animals being in shelters is that high quality stock for herding, guarding, hunting, working with small children are not going to be found at the local rescue. Rescues rarely have purebred, quality, specialized animals.

  21. Anonymous November 4, 2023

    Because of this trend, we now have a highly reactive, fearful dog though he’s on Prozac. The time, stress and money involved is extreme. We tried to have him put down, but after we got there the vet wouldn’t. We just had him put under to get his nails done. No vet will even check his ears, or go near him without him being put under. Now our lives have changed for next 5 to 8 years. This dog is not happy, he vomits often, is still fearful of so, so many things and I feel awful every day because I can’t make him happy. I’m losing money because I stay at home more often and my son is paying a fortune for meds and ground turkey. 3lbs a day, when he isn’t puking. He can’t eat anything else, which will cause more problems. He suffers every day. When I go to work he gets heartburn and needs to throw up sooner or later. Can’t eat. It’s a vicious circle. He needs one owner, preferably male, who stays home all the time, no visitors, quiet countryside. He has a favorite person, my son, works 12 hours a day who he pines for loud suburb, mom who (kinda) will do, but not as good as son. He’s happy for the brief moments my son is home, that’s it. I can’t give him treats in his snuffle mat or bone, because he’s always sick, so more depression and anxiety. Our lives are terrible, all of us!

  22. Debby McMullen November 7, 2023

    I am so terribly sorry. You need a new veterinarian. If you are comfortable doing so, please email me at debby@pawsitivereactions.com and give me a location and I will find you a better veterinarian. Even better, here is a resource that you should consider. https://caabpodcasts.com/index.php/2020/05/01/behavioral-euthanasia/ Trish is the go to in this subject. My heart hurts for you and the dog. Please know that people out here care.

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