- The Euthanasia Rate was calculated by dividing the number of animals euthanized by the total outcomes
- Alabama, Louisiana, and Hawaii had the top three euthanasia rates at 23.4%, 22.3%, and 18.7%, respectively
- Government Animal Services and Shelters w/ Gov. Contracts had the highest euthanasia rates at 20.8% and 16.4%, respectively
So my understanding on this if I am reading it right and assuming they are right is Ca. leads in stray animals and La. is up there 2nd from the top in dong something about the excess animals.
CA has more gov’t resources is what I’m reading. It’s too expensive to house, feed, and treat so poorer states euthanize.
Chuck’s mom was a feral stray and she was picked up and euthanized. Kittens were 4wks. Shelter employee said they picked her up and knew she had kittens, but didn’t find them. They were born under our house but I didn’t interact much because I knew I couldn’t keep them. We didn’t find out about the mom for two weeks— the neighbor was friends with the shelter employees and asked if they’d picked up a cat in our area because we hadn’t seen her. Only 4 of 8 kittens were left before we realized it and the neighbor caught them and brought them in to care for them. She got their shots and everything then adopted them out.
After 8wks of DH saying we would never, ever have a cat, he came home the night before their adoption and said if I wanted a cat, that was my only chance. I got first pick. Chuck was the biggest, meanest, fattest kitten of the bunch. I figured he could survive anything, so I picked him.