Program Endorsements
We recognize that it’s not always easy to get buy-in from everyone when creating change and implementing new or innovative programming. We created our program endorsements for organizations to use as a resource to give credit to these programs when additional support is needed. These fundamental guides contain information about five important programs that Best Friends supports. They can be used as a quick reference for easily shareable messaging about each program.
Click the links below to be directed to the text for each of these resources. Each section contains an overview, program components, and links to helpful resources. You’ll also find a button to download a PDF version of each.
Community-Based Field Services
Conversation-Based Adoption Services
Best Friends supports community-based field services
Today’s animal control field service departments have seen a significant change in how they can successfully serve their communities. After decades of trying to solve animal-related issues through strict enforcement of the laws, agencies have had greater success by using a community-based approach to these problems. This approach is proving to build better relationships with community residents and encourage higher cooperation and compliance rates, and is resulting in lower animal intake into shelters.
Best Friends Animal Society endorses a community-based model of field services, which can include:
- The discontinuation of impounding healthy community (aka stray and outdoor) cats
- The discretion to not issue citations when appropriate
- Tools and resources such as food and over-the-counter flea and tick treatment to provide free of charge to residents in need
A comprehensive field return-to-owner (F-RTO) program goes beyond simply scanning found dogs for microchips. It can include:
- Officers interacting with community members to identify who owns the pet
- Posting information about the pet on social media platforms before impounding the animal into the shelter
- Actively attempting to locate a dog’s owner before leaving the scene
Resources
Community Engagement Strategies: This appendix from the Best Friends Humane Animal Control manual describes how one community made the transition from enforcement-based to community-based field services and how an agency can make that switch.
Best Friends supports community cat programs
Community cat programs (CCPs) are an integral part of operations for animal shelters across the country. This humane approach is fiscally responsible and effective, providing an immediate, lasting response for cats in and out of shelters. CCPs also free up valuable resources and increase adoption of cats not eligible for return to their neighborhoods. CCPs are as unique as the communities they serve, but all share one central belief: Trap-and-remove does not work.
Best Friends Animal Society endorses CCPs. To Best Friends, these programs can include:
- Implementing trap-neuter-vaccinate-return (TNVR) and return-to-field (RTF) for community cats
- Passing local ordinances that support or, at the very least, do not work against CCPs
- Not accepting healthy community cats into a shelter program when access to spay/neuter is not available
- Using strategic intake to leave kittens outside with their nursing mom until they are of age for surgery
- Addressing complaints with meaningful nuisance mitigation
- Using TNVR in areas of limited resources only to support RTF programs or provide direct intake prevention
Through TNVR and RTF, cats:
- Are either feral or friendly
- Are at the age and weight that the spay/neuter provider deems appropriate for surgery
- Are returned after an overnight recovery period for females
- Receive one dose of FVCRP and one dose of rabies (if the cat is old enough, per local legislation)
- Are, in most cases, un-microchipped
- Are with or without known caregivers
Resources
Best Friends supports conversation-based adoption services
Local placement options account for most animal outcomes in shelters with a save rate of 90% or more. However, adoption takes the top spot, representing 63.4% of all outcomes in 2,118 no-kill shelters in 2019. Adoption plays the largest role in both closing the lifesaving gap and leveraging the community to support cats and dogs in shelters.
Best Friends Animal Society endorses the practice of conversation-based adoptions. To Best Friends, that can mean:
- Having nonjudgmental conversations with prospective adopters instead of having them fill out lengthy applications
- Striving to be inclusive and counteracting any biases around who is a suitable adopter
- Removing home, veterinarian and landlord checks, while providing adopters with information about the importance and availability of veterinary care
- Removing the requirement that adopters have a fenced-in yard
- Removing adopter and family age restrictions with a focus on supporting adopters to find the pets best matched to their home environment
- Offering reduced-fee or fee-waived adoptions
- Having open hours outside of standard business hours
- Making pets available for adoption as soon as they are taken into the shelter
- Having same-day adoptions
- Marketing pets to all constituents
- Releasing pets prior to spay/neuter with contracts to sterilize or as foster-to-adopt when access to surgery is limited
Resources
Best Friends supports return-to-home programs
Reuniting lost pets with their people is one of the most critical roles for shelters across the country. A robust return-to-home program includes everyone on the shelter’s team. Animal services officers attempt to return pets to their homes before bringing them to the shelter. Shelter admissions staff scan stray pets for microchips. And volunteers or staff manage lost-and-found social media pages (with support from platforms like Petco Love Lost).
Here at Best Friends, we believe in the power of collaboration and robust return-to-home programs in communities. Some of the key components to include in a successful return-to-home program are:
- A foster-finder program with willing residents to keep pets in the neighborhoods where they were found
- A dedicated field services team that prioritizes return-to-home efforts in the community prior to bringing pets to the shelter
- Working with utility companies to track down pets’ families based on their last known address (if the microchip contains outdated information)
- Encouraging a communication-first mentality when a loose pet is found, including surveying the surroundings to find the pet’s person, talking to neighbors, and posting lost pet signage (if the pet’s person can’t be found)
- Waiving return-to-home fees and citations when applicable
- Hosting low-cost or free microchip clinics in the field and offering microchips at the shelter or in the field
- Including microchips and tags as a central component of the licensure program
- Allowing people to look for lost pets at the shelter anytime staff members are onsite, even if it’s outside of normal business hours
- Ensuring proper training of call dispatchers so that return-to-home procedures are implemented at the first point of public contact
- Confirming that high-quality photos of found animals are posted online (e.g., to the shelter website, Petco Love Lost, Petfinder, social media, etc.) to support reunification efforts
Resources
Best Friends supports strategic intake services
Limited- and open-admission shelters across the country are successfully transitioning to strategic or managed intake. An appointment-based style of intake allows organizations to provide tailored resources to their constituents and break free of the ineffective, one-size-fits-all practice of open intake.
Strategic intake is beneficial to shelter staff because it helps them to better manage their daily tasks, allowing them to focus on the needs of pet owners and their pets. It benefits pet owners by providing them with individualized attention and resources. Strategic intake should be seen as an expansion of services, not a reduction, because the resources freed up through this approach are redirected to other lifesaving efforts.
Best Friends Animal Society endorses strategic intake. To Best Friends, strategic intake can include:
- Expanding the services being offered to constituents
- Scheduling appointments with pet owners and then having conversations with them to find the best outcome for their pets, which often includes alternatives to their pets entering the shelter
- Partnering with private organizations to help support pet owners needing assistance
- Offering temporary foster care and boarding services for pet owners who are unable to care for their pets for a short period of time
- Implementing finder-foster programs that help keep stray pets in the same neighborhoods where they were found
- Still accepting pets in need of urgent care without an appointment
- Practicing return-to-owner in the field and offering a community cat program
Resources
These Best Friends town hall meetings provide insight about managed intake:
- Making the Case for a New Tomorrow
- Out with the Old, in with the New: Switching Gears to Managed Intake