Region's animal shelters see euthanasia rates fall

SPRINGDALE -- Multiple animal shelters in Northwest Arkansas have reduced their euthanasia rates over the past few years.

Courtney Kremer said she started working as director of Springdale Animal Services in August 2012. The euthanasia rate at the shelter was 51 percent in 2011. That decreased to 21 percent in 2014, according to data from Spay Arkansas.

Spay Arkansas is a nonprofit organization in Springdale offering spay and neuter services, according to the organization's website. Shelters aren't required to report euthanasia numbers, but many report numbers voluntarily to Spay Arkansas.

Kremer said Springdale reports deaths of all dogs and cats going into the shelter unless they are dead on arrival. Animals can be euthanized for various reasons, including because of court orders, animals not adapting to the shelter or lack of space.

Kremer said the reduction in euthanasia rates at Springdale's shelter has been a team effort. She credited the Springdale staff, volunteers, foster homes and community for the decrease.

"We really did good things last year," she said.

Springdale's City Council has increased the budget for veterinary care and more people are fostering animals, Kremer said. There were three volunteers and no foster homes when she started working there, and now there are more than 30 volunteers and at least 12 foster homes.

A new puppy room and new cat rooms at the shelter also could be factors, Kremer said. The puppy room helps with disease prevention, while the cat rooms can help the animals feel less stressed and, in turn, make them less susceptible to sickness.

There will always be animals that are euthanized, Kremer said. However, she said she wants to see the rates decrease further. She said she believes euthanasia for space reasons is unacceptable.

Kremer said she would like for the Springdale shelter to increase its use of rescue organizations that allow cats and dogs to be moved out of state for adoption.

Fayetteville Animal Shelter also greatly reduced its euthanasia rate for cats and dogs from 2011 to 2014, according to data from Spay Arkansas. The shelter's euthanasia rate was 36 percent in 2011 and 10 percent in 2014.

Fayetteville's numbers include any cat or dog euthanized after intake, said Justine Lentz, animal services superintendent. This doesn't include any animal that dies naturally after intake instead of by euthanasia. However, that's rare, she said.

The biggest catalyst for the Fayetteville shelter's reduction was the opening of Washington County Animal Shelter in September 2012, Lentz said.

Fayetteville's euthanasia rate in 2011 included cats and dogs from Washington County, according to data from Spay Arkansas. The 36 percent rate declined to 23 percent in 2012.

Other factors, including mandatory microchipping of pets in Fayetteville and promotion of spaying and neutering of cats and dogs, contributed to the decline, Lentz said. Scannable microchips implanted in an animal's neck can provide information about how to contact owners.

The Fayetteville shelter's euthanasia rate this year was 9.4 percent through Oct. 31, Lentz said.

Washington County Animal Shelter reduced its euthanasia rate from 2012 to 2014, according to data from Spay Arkansas. The shelter's euthanasia rate was 23 percent in 2012 and 18 percent in 2014.

The shelter's euthanasia rate includes all adoptable animals euthanized to make space, shelter Director Angela Ledgerwood said in an email. She described adoptable animals as those that aren't "contagiously sick, suffering or behaviorally dangerous." As of Friday, the shelter hadn't euthanized any animals to free space this year.

Ledgerwood wrote that the shelter has taken multiple steps to reduce its euthanasia rate. Among those steps are an advertising campaign, adoption specials and use of social media.

"By increasing adoptions we automatically decrease euthanasia," she wrote.

Ledgerwood also said the shelter "must work harder to find additional reputable rescue groups to take the animals." She also wrote about the need to "increase the number of people entering the shelter" to adopt pets.

Bella Vista Animal Shelter reduced its already-low euthanasia rate from 2011 to 2014, according to data from Spay Arkansas. The shelter's rate was 5 percent in 2011 and 4 percent in 2014.

The nonprofit shelter includes all deaths in its rate, said Tammie Cavness, assistant shelter manager. This excludes an animal that arrives dead, said Deidre Knight-Matney, executive director.

Cavness said the shelter keeps its euthanasia rate low by using rescue organizations in other states and encouraging adoption through participation in events.

"We don't want to euthanize anything unless we absolutely have to," she said.

The Bella Vista shelter had a 3.6 percent euthanasia rate from Jan. 1 to Oct. 31, Knight-Matney said.

Rogers Animal Shelter also reduced its euthanasia rate from 2011 to 2014, according to data from Spay Arkansas. The shelter's euthanasia rate was 26 percent in 2011 and 8 percent in 2014.

Rogers includes any cat or dog euthanized after intake, said Bud Norman, director of Rogers Animal Services. It doesn't include natural deaths.

Norman described the factors for reducing euthanasia as many pieces of a puzzle. Some of those pieces are building the shelter's customer base and the shelter's work with rescue organizations. The shelter sends an average of about 100 animals a year to out-of-state rescue organizations. Most are dogs.

Shelters could decrease their euthanasia numbers even further by encouraging people to look for lost pets at shelters and increasing awareness of adoption, Norman said. As of Thursday, the Rogers shelter had a 1.5 percent euthanasia rate for 2015.

Metro on 11/23/2015

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