No, “Pandemic Pups” Aren’t Being Returned to Shelters at High Rates — Foster Dogs



2020 saw record numbers of pet adoptions and foster rates from shelters, as well as breeder purchases, as people across the country sought the companionship of furry friends of all shapes and sizes while working from home and/or quarantining. 

As Susanne Kogut, President of Petco Love (formerly Petco Foundation), describes in her recent article, “Don’t believe the hype about pandemic puppies being returned”:

These pet parents shared almost every moment of the day with these pets, bonding and experiencing their unconditional love like never before. We collectively rejoiced in the stories of pets helping people cope with the anxiety and stress of the pandemic; their love providing some much-needed joy during this time.

What happens to these pets when people return to work and no longer have the time or resources to care for them? If we are to believe recent headlines in the media, people are heartlessly dumping their “pandemic puppies” in shelters. USA Today published an article earlier this month, “Everyone wanted a puppy when the pandemic began, but now those dogs are being returned.”

But are these headlines accurate? Are shelters at risked of being overwhelmed with abandoned pets? The New York Times published an article last week, responding to the sensationalist headlines about returning dogs previously welcomed in the “pandemic puppy boom.” Says Michael Levenson for the Times, “Monthly reports from PetPoint, a website that aggregates data from more than 1,100 animal welfare organizations in the United States, suggest that while shelters have experienced an increase in pets coming in, their numbers are merely returning to the levels reported before the pandemic.”

According to Kogut, this supposed crisis is simply not real, and it is not supported by national shelter data. 

Kogut writes:

It is assumed that these pet parents are not aware of or will not expend resources to send their pups to doggy daycare, hire dog walkers and dog trainers, or even advocate for pets at work programs, like so many other pet parents have done in the past. Does this sound like a reasonable conclusion? No, and we haven’t witnessed that trend at shelters . 

We will be happy to hear your thoughts

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