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A no-kill shelter is an animal shelter that does not kill healthy or treatable animals based on time limits or capacity, reserving euthanasia for terminally ill animals, animals suffering poor quality of life, or those considered dangerous to public safety. Some no-kill shelters will commit to not killing any animals at all, under any ...
This category contains animal shelters that save all healthy and treatable animals, including feral cats. Euthanasia is only used for animals who are irremediably suffering, in which medical treatment cannot alleviate their condition, or in the case of dogs, a threat to public safety with a poor prognosis for rehabilitation.
Animal welfare organizations are concerned with the health, safety and psychological wellness of individual animals. These organizations include animal rescue groups and wildlife rehabilitation centers, which care for animals in distress and sanctuaries, where animals are brought to live and be protected for the rest of their lives.
Patches, a 40-pound cat, was adopted from the Richmond Animal Care and Control shelter by Kay Ford, who will help him lose weight and stay healthy.
Running a no-kill shelter doesn’t mean never euthanizing unwanted animals — or never turning some away when space runs out.
Alley Cat Allies created National Feral Cat Day in 2001, [17] which it promotes every October 16. In 2017, the organization changed the event's name to Global Cat Day. [18] On October 16, 2023, Alley Cat Allies conducted a program in Grand Cayman, providing spay/neuter surgeries for as many as 100 cats and distributing cat food.
A Raleigh cat rescue group that wants feral felines to have warm, secure places to sleep held a Community Cat Bin Class on Saturday where more than 20 people learned how to quickly turn a plastic ...
A no-kill shelter is a usually private organization whose policies include the specification that no healthy, pet-worthy animal be euthanized; Not-for-profit rescue organizations typically operate through a network of volunteer foster homes. [4] These rescue organizations are also committed to a no-kill policy.