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© 2008,Pat Miller/Peaceable Paws LLC
All Rights Reserved  

What’s Wrong With No-Kill?

Imagine a world where no dog is ever euthanized for being homeless. Where there are more homes than dogs. Where waiting lists are maintained at every possible dog-adoption-source, with potential adopters anxiously await the next available canine. Where every dog is treasured, and the thought of “rehoming” one of these wonderful, valuable creatures is totally preposterous. Wouldn’t we all be delighted to see that?

That’s a lovely vision. But today, in the United States, it is just that – a vision. Despite the growing ranks of shelters that claim to be “No-Kill” and the proponents who claim that it’s possible to turn every shelter into a “No-Kill” facility, in reality, we are far from being a “No-Kill Nation.”

Of course, every person who loves and respects other living creatures would like to see an end to all senseless, tragic killing. It’s easy to get swept up in the hope of no-kill. Surely, if we just try hard enough, we can find homes for them all.

Or maybe not. HSUS estimates that 3-4 million homeless dogs and cats are euthanized at animal shelters in this country every year. When I started working at the Marin Humane Society in Novato, California in 1976 the estimated number was 17-18 million. Taken in perspective, that looks like a huge improvement, and indeed it is – but 3-4 million deaths per year is still a huge number.

When they public hears “no-kill shelter” they tend to think that means that no animals are euthanized. However, that’s simply not the case. The animal protection profession has generally accepted the definition of “no-kill” as “no euthanasia of adoptable, non-treatable, non-rehabilitatable (medically or behaviorally) animals.”

While this may be a reasonable definition of “no-kill,” the confusion goes even deeper. One “no-kill” shelter may decide that a dog with mild resource guarding is non-rehabilitatable because they don’t have staff to work with dogs who need behavior modification, or because their organization has a low-risk tolerance for any aggression-related behaviors. Another “no-kill” shelter may have an entire behavior department, and commit significant resources to behavior modification. At the first shelter the dog dies. At the second, he lives. But they’re both “no-kill” by industry definition.

The same is true with physical ailments. One shelter may be able to isolate and treat a dog with upper respiratory infection, or one with a broken leg, while another might euthanize that same dog due to lack of resources, or different priorities for finite resources. Both call themselves “no-kill.”

There are legitimate, well-run limited admission shelters that rarely euthanize. They are up front with their supporters about what they do, why and how. They acknowledge that they can exist because at least one other shelter in the community is willing to take on the responsibility for caring for – and euthanizing – the animals that the limited admission shelter can’t or won’t. These shelters tend to avoid using the “no-kill” term, as they honestly admit that try as they might, there are times when the humane choice is to euthanize an animal that’s not thriving under their care.

There are also well-run limited admission shelters that may disingenuously call themselves “no-kill” by hiding behind the industry definition, even though their supporters probably don’t understand the distinction. Some also claim the “no-kill” designation because when an animal must be euthanized they don’t do it themselves – they send it to a full-service shelter.

There are other, more serious problems with “no-kill.” Competition for animal protection donation dollars can be fierce, and the public appeal of the misleading “no-kill” designation draws millions of dollars from the limited donor pool. Meanwhile, full-service shelters who care for animal who are just as needy, if not more so, struggle to convince their donors not to jump ship for organizations with a happier-sounding mission. Donations to “no-kill” facilities may actually help a smaller number of animals than contributions to full-service shelters. Maddie’s Fund, established in the 1990’s by an animal-loving philanthropist, offers significant grants to communities whose animal rescue groups and shelters work together to become “adoption-guarantee” communities. Shelters who comply may end up euthanizing similar numbers of animals as before, they just label them differently to bring them under the “no-kill” definition. Shelters can learn to play the semantics game quickly in order to benefit financially.

Some “no-kill” shelters and rescue groups are reluctant to turn animals away or to euthanize even when a humane ethic suggests it. Quality of life takes a distant back seat for dogs in an overcrowded facility, and many dogs who are housed for life in a kennel suffer severe psychological distress resulting in depression, aggression and/or obsessive compulsive behaviors. Refusal to euthanize these dogs not only results in their mental and/or physical suffering, but also severely restricts the number of additional healthy, adoptable dogs these facilities could help.

Dedicated animal protection professionals made significant progress in their efforts to reduce euthanasia numbers well before the “no-kill” movement became widely popular a decade ago. Unfortunately, despite those “no-kill” efforts, euthanasia numbers have remained static in the past ten years. During the same ten years, many skilled and capable shelter administrators have left or been forced out of the profession rather than succumb to – or fight – the pressure of the high-profile “no-kill” advocates and well-meaning but misguided local citizens who have bought into the misleading “no-kill” message.

At the same time, there’s been a quantum rise in the investigation and prosecution of animal hoarders who, in many cases position themselves as legitimate rescue groups and often are the recipients of dogs from “low-kill” and “no-kill” shelters desperate to keep their statistics looking rosy.

Usually when something seems too good to be true… it is. Such is the case with the empty promise of “no-kill.” I do believe that someday, all animals who have potential to be adopted will find lifelong loving homes. That day isn’t here, and it isn’t now, but it’s out there. It will require the continued hard work of dedicated and realistic animal protection professionals who continue the hard work of public education, spay/neuter campaigns, science-based animal behavior and training programs, and yes, euthanasia, rather than the flip of a semantics magic wand. It will take many more years. But yes, the day will come.

 

WHAT YOU CAN DO:

  1. Investigate your local shelters to determine their organizational structure, and identify what services they offer.
  2. Visit the shelters in your community to determine the quality of service they offer and animal care they provide.
  3. Support and help the shelters that deserve your patronage.
  4. Take steps to improve the ones where human and non-human clients receive less-than-optimal care.

 

Pat Miller is a Certified Dog and Horse Behavior Consultant and Certified Professional Dog Trainer. She offers classes, behavior modification services, training clinics and academies for trainers at her 80-acre Peaceable Paws training facility in Fairplay, Maryland, and presents seminars worldwide. She has authored “The Power of Positive Dog Training,” “Positive Perspectives,” “Positive Perspectives 2,” and “Play With Your Dog.” Miller is training editor for The Whole Dog Journal, writes for Tuft’s University’s Your Dog, and several other publications. She shares her home with husband Paul, five dogs, three cats, five horses and a donkey. www.peaceablepaws.com

 

 

 

Cumberland Valley Animal Shelter, Inc.
2325 Country Road Chambersburg, PA 17202
(P) 717- 263-5791 · (F) 717- 263-2042
 cvasadmin@innernet.net

We have been providing humane services for animals in need, and assisting adoptable pets in a second chance of love and companionship at our current building, since 1995.