Animal Services makes strides in 2014 toward ‘no kill’ goal

Miami-Dade County Animal Services

Miami-Dade County Animal ServicesMiami-Dade County Animal Services (Animal Services), 7401 NW 74 St., achieved a combined save rate for cats and dogs of 81.5 percent in 2014, bringing the shelter and the Miami-Dade County community closer than ever to realizing the 90 percent save rate that has become the benchmark of no kill success.

Since adopting no kill policies in 2012 as the guiding principle for providing care and refuge for over 27,000 unwanted dogs and cats, Animal Service’s save rate has continued to grow at unprecedented rates. The save rate for dogs increased from 61 percent in 2010 to 82 percent in 2014 while the save rate for cats increased from 18 percent in 2010 to 81 percent in 2014. Becoming a no kill shelter requires the live release of 90 percent of the animals through adoptions, returns to owners or transfers to other no-kill facilities.

A $4 million increase in the Animal Services budget — approved by county commissioners in 2013 — has enabled the shelter to implement lifesaving programs and services that include, but are not limited to; a strong focus on adoptions, an increase in off-site adoption events, Trap- Neuter-Return services for community cats, low cost spay/neuter services, volunteer and foster care training and recruitment, pet retention counseling, improved intake vaccination protocols, on-staff supervisory and treatment veterinarians and transport to guaranteed adoption facilities.

Animal Services also enhanced its lost and found services, and currently partners with over 70 local rescue organizations and offers funding to qualified rescue groups who take in at-risk shelter pets.

Animal Services’ efforts have earned recognition and grants from the American Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals (ASPCA) and works collaboratively with the Humane Society of Greater Miami and The Cat Network as part of the ASPCA Community Partnership. A recent grant from Florida Animal Friends enabled Animal Services to offer income-qualified residents in Miami-Dade County free spay/neuter services for the duration of the grant funds.

In 2014, Animal Services was able to save over 20,000 of the over 27,000 dogs and cats abandoned every year at the shelter. In 2015, Animal Services will continue the steadfast implementation of lifesaving programs and hopes to move into its new location having achieved its no kill goal.

For more information, visit animals.miamidade.gov or call 3-1-1.


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7 COMMENTS

  1. The numbers are bogus. The killing machine never stopped or slowed down. Pit bulls are banned and going to be killed automatically. Years passed and nothing changed. Getting worse. One director after another is failing those animals.

  2. In the rescue community and from the mouths of one of the largest most respected rescues in NJ, “Miami-Dade is a hell hole with appalling conditions and lack of regard for the animals and their suffering!” Great statistics though, except of course for the poor Pit bulls, the most loving affectionate breed that exists.

  3. miami dade animal shelter is a kill shelter so how is that no kill not to metion sum of there workers mistreat animals and are still allowed to work there

  4. How does the county achieve "no kill" status if they still have a breed ban? Do they include "pit bull" types in their numbers or do those get pushed aside to the kill rooms without affecting the "no kill" percentages?

    Nice "journalism", by the way, Brickell (sarcasm intended). Reprinting a press release from the government? Way to hold them accountable!!

  5. guess you forgot about all the "pit bulls" they kill automatically, because of the breed ban there. How are those accounted for in the statistics? In the "unadoptable" category, as in "we save xx% of adoptable animals"… so any animal that is "unadoptable isn't counted? Despite any claim to "no kill", they're dead anyway

  6. That is so amazing! it’s so nice to know our government really has exert their efforts to give this organization funds that can support these animals who still have no owners to care for them. It really touches my heart for the effort they made and I do hope that the people who are visiting this website would have a heart to adopt some of these very adorable animals.

  7. Of course MDAS will simply ignore the fact that many of the pets "saved" ended up with rescue hoarders or transferred and abandoned in area boarding kennels while the staff pushed for numbers. Too bad the taxpayers aren't smart enough to see how you are being hood winked by a group who refuses to deal with the real issues of pet overpopulation caused by unlicensed irresponsible breeding.

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