logo
Second Chance says economic squeeze is pushing pets out of homes, into shelters

Second Chance says economic squeeze is pushing pets out of homes, into shelters

Yahoo02-05-2025

EAST BROOKFIELD — Roxie, an 8-year-old German shepherd and husky mixed-breed dog, spent two years and six days at Second Chance Animal Services in East Brookfield before someone adopted her. It took a while to find her a home because of the way she 'greeted' people, said Mike Byrnes, her new owner.
'She's very timid and a little scared. She'll show you her teeth and growl,' he told The Republican.
Byrnes, 52, is a kitchen and bathroom salesman who volunteers two days a week at Second Chance. He helps care for and walk the dogs. That's how he met Roxie.
'From the day I met her, she was barking and yelling at me, and I was just trying to feed her peanut butter,' he said. 'Once you understand what she's all about and start speaking her language, you bond with her.'
Byrnes lived in a 'no-pets-allowed' apartment. He then bought a house in Monson so he could adopt Roxie and bring her home. He chokes up talking about it.
'I've put a lot of time and effort into giving her the life she deserves. This is a big day for her and me,' he said, on the morning when he recently brought her home to his two cats. 'I literally bought this house for her.'
While it is unusual, it is not unheard of for larger dogs to spend a long time at a shelter. The East Brookfield adoption center has two others like Roxie that have been waiting many months for a permanent home.
Second Chance founder and President Sheryl Blancato said it is tough to place these 'rare gems.'
'People come in, and they're looking for the perfect pet,' she said. 'They're looking for something that's already housebroken and going to have zero issues. That's not reality. We've become a very instantaneous society, and if an animal doesn't work out in the first 24 hours, they bring it back.'
Experts say the animal care industry is facing an immense challenge — while kittens and small dogs are more adoptable because it can be easier to care for them, it is taking longer to find homes for medium to large canines.
Second Chance has space for just over a dozen large dogs, and it is always at capacity. Years ago, there was usually room for one or two more big pups — now there is a two-week wait to get in, because owners are surrendering so many of them.
Authorities say many animals go unadopted or are given up because families cannot afford the rising cost of pet care, including food and veterinary bills.
'I also see housing as a problem. There are a lot of great adopters out there that can't find housing because landlords don't allow pets. I shake my head, because I was a landlord, and people are more likely to cause problems than their animals,' said Blancato.
Shelters are finding various ways to handle what some in the industry are calling a crisis. To encourage adoption, it has become fairly common for some to waive fees, which can average at least $400.
The Massachusetts Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals drops the fee several times a year.
'Surrenders are up, and adoptions are down everywhere, which is creating a backlog and a capacity crisis in shelters across the country and in Massachusetts,' said Jamie Garabedian, project manager for the MSPCA's Animal Protection Division.
'Economic instability is at the heart of it, and there's a lack of affordable, pet-friendly housing. There is also a lack of affordable veterinary care and a staffing crisis in veterinarian world,' she continued.
Dakin Humane Society in Springfield is seeing an increase in the number of owners surrendering their pets, a 5% increase from 2023 to 2024 — from 3,827 to 4,008, according to Lee Chambers, Dakin's media relations specialist.
She also indicated, however, that adoptions are up 10% from 2,780 in 2023 to 3,031 in 2024. Dakin also is seeing an increase in the number of families fostering pets until the animals can be adopted into permanent homes.
'We have a lot of people who serve as fosters, and that makes an enormous difference. They take pets into their homes if our shelter is a little tight on space or if the animal is stressed from being in a shelter and needs quiet time,' she said.
Second Chance Animal Services has grown its presence in Massachusetts, becoming one of the commonwealth's largest pet care organizations.
The nonprofit business is operating on an $8 million budget this year, derived from public and private grants and donations, as well as revenue from fundraisers. The shelter receives no government assistance, according to Blancato.
The business has a staff of 100 including veterinarians and veterinary technicians. The organization also has 275 volunteers that help run its hospitals in Springfield, Worcester, Southbridge and North Brookfield.
The shelter also has an adoption center, primarily for dogs and cats, in East Brookfield. There is a warehouse in Southbridge, where Second Chance stores food it buys and collects before delivering it to pantries where people in need pick up free groceries for themselves and their pets.
The organization distributed 32 tons of pet food last year, with a goal of doubling that to 64 tons this year, according the Blancato. The operation is amid a capital campaign to raise $225,000, so it can more than triple the size of its warehouse from 300 to 1,000 square feet.
Blancato reports that Second Chance helped 57,000 animals last year but only a minority of them — around 1,500 — were through adoption. The mission is to keep pets and their families together by offering donated food and low cost veterinary services.
'We don't want people surrendering their pets. If the animals are in a loving home, we want them to stay there,' said Blancato.
The nonprofit chief claims the four hospitals offer dramatically reduced prices for everything from vaccinations, exams and small procedures, to major surgery, spaying and neutering. There are even deeper discounts for people who meet income qualifications, she added.
Second Chance pays its veterinarians above market-rate salaries, said Blancato, up to $200,000 a year, depending on a doctor's skill set. She said she has little trouble hiring vets and now has 25 after hiring 14 so far this year.
The East Brookfield facility is facing rising costs like other veterinary hospitals; however, managers say they are keeping expenses down through a business practice called Lean Six Sigma.
The laser-focused approach is said to eliminate waste and streamline processes, increasing efficiency, reducing costs and in Second Chance's case, helping keep people and their pets together.
'The joke here is we can't throw away that pencil because there's still lead in it. We're very careful about our money. Our buildings are very humble, not huge and palatial,' said Blancato. 'We have turned animal welfare upside down.'
Read the original article on MassLive.
Read the original article on MassLive.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

UN General Assembly to elect ex-German minister Baerbock as president
UN General Assembly to elect ex-German minister Baerbock as president

Yahoo

timean hour ago

  • Yahoo

UN General Assembly to elect ex-German minister Baerbock as president

The UN General Assembly is set to elect former German foreign minister Annalena Baerbock as the president of the largest UN body on Monday. Baerbock is running unopposed for the one-year top position, which is primarily of ceremonial significance and should not be confused with the role of UN Secretary General António Guterres. The election in the plenary session before 193 UN member countries is considered a formality. The official inauguration of the Green Party politician is due to take place on September 9, shortly before the general debate of the UN General Assembly with state guests from around the world.

Look Back: Anniversary of D-Day this week
Look Back: Anniversary of D-Day this week

Yahoo

time7 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Look Back: Anniversary of D-Day this week

Jun. 1—This week marks 81 years since Operation Overlord — the Normandy landings in German occupied France by Allied forces during World War II — was launched on June 6, 1944. Wyoming Valley residents learned of the landings, known as D-Day, either by the crackle of a radio or the Wilkes-Barre Record newspaper with the bold headline, "Allies Invade France Across English Channel," published June 6, 1944. A large crowd gathered outside the Times Leader/Evening News/Record building on North Main Street, Wilkes-Barre, to hear reports from a radio placed in a window. Many churches and Jewish synagogues opened their doors for services with Catholic churches reciting the Holy Rosary every hour on the hour. Stores and coal collieries delayed opening, and many homes and businesses displayed the American flag upon hearing the news of D-Day. Following the Japanese attack at Pearl Harbor, Hawaii, on Dec. 7, 1941, thousands of young men enlisted at local military recruiting offices. Upon completion of basic training, those young men were put into service either in the Pacific Theatre or the European Theatre during World War II. Anxious mothers and fathers waited days to hear if their sons took part in the Normandy landings. One of the first stories involving local servicemen being involved in D-Day was published in the June 10, 1944, editions of the Times Leader and Record. U.S. Army sergeants James P. Franklin Jr., of Shickshinny, and Samuel L. Latona, of Pittston, were aboard a glider-towing twin-engine Dakota when they were shot down by German flak just off the Normandy coastline, the newspapers reported. "They made a forced landing in the English channel about 10 miles off the coast and piled into a dinghy," reported the newspapers. After several hours floating in the channel, a British destroyer rescued the two local servicemen along with the rest of their crew. In early July 1944, local newspapers began reporting those who were killed, wounded or lost on D-Day. "World War 2 has claimed the lives of two more servicemen from the area, another is reported missing in action, and four are listed as wounded in action in latest casualty announcements by the War and Navy Departments," reported the Record July 5, 1944. The first notification of killed-in-action of local servicemen were U.S. Army Pfc. George Kashula, 22, of 38 Park St., Korn Krest, Hanover Township; and U.S. Army Pfc. Bernard John Loboda, 25, of 405 S. Sherman St., Wilkes-Barre. Kashula, who served in the 453rd Quartermaster Truck Company, 5th Engineer Special Brigade; and Loboda, with the 5th Ranger Battalion, Company F, were killed on Omaha Beach on the first day of the Normandy landings.

Germany issues invitation to culture and nature on World Heritage Day
Germany issues invitation to culture and nature on World Heritage Day

Yahoo

time12 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Germany issues invitation to culture and nature on World Heritage Day

The Wadden Sea, Cologne Cathedral and the Zollverein Coal Mine Industrial Complex in Essen have one thing in common: They have been designated as World Heritage Sites by UNESCO, marking them as places of exceptional value to all of humanity. There are now 54 World Heritage Sites in Germany, and, for the 20th time, the German UNESCO Commission invited people to these protected sites with a variety of activities for World Heritage Day on Sunday. "The aim of the day of action is to make World Heritage accessible to everyone," German UNESCO Commission President Maria Böhmer said at a ceremony in St Michael's Church in the northern German city of Hildesheim. The World Heritage Day was opened there under the motto "Convey, Connect, Enthuse." It is a "very beautiful, colourful, lively festival," a spokesman said on Sunday afternoon. The Romanesque cathedral and St Michael's Church in the approximately 1,200-year-old city have been World Cultural Heritage sites since 1985. According to UNESCO, more than 350 events are on the programme across Germany. These range from a torchlight tour for children through the caves of the Swabian Jura to a mining adventure hike in the Ore Mountains and a rap tour through Hamburg's Speicherstadt. There are now more than 1,200 UNESCO World Heritage Sites in 168 countries worldwide, and the list expands every year. Already nominated are Germany's castles of King Ludwig II of Bavaria: Neuschwanstein, Linderhof, Schachen and Herrenchiemsee. The World Heritage Committee is expected to decide in July whether they will be added to the World Heritage list. In the meantime, some World Heritage Sites are transnational. Germany's Ancient Beech Forests were added to the list in 2011 as an extension of the Carpathian Beech Forests, which span 18 countries in Central and South-Eastern Europe. The Wadden Sea, on the edge of the North Sea, was included in 2009 and extended in 2014 to include the Danish Wadden Sea. In the German state of Lower Saxony, the Rammelsberg Mine, the old town of Goslar in the Harz, and the Upper Harz Water Management System can also boast the title. The Fagus Factory in Alfeld, Lower Saxony, designed in 1911 by architect and Bauhaus founder Walter Gropius, has been on the World Heritage list since 2011.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store