BCMixs
Posted : 4/8/2008 11:24:18 PM
Your mom's experience sounds troubling to me. In my area, the animals I see on display in Petsmart and Petco still require the adopter to go through the process established by the organizations who has placed them there (different area humane societies or rescues, etc.) and the person cannot just pick it out and take it home, so there seems to be some protection at least here against impulse adoptions.
However, I got my cat just that way. My county's AC is just awful, but I wanted to save a life. It was pick it out, pay $25, sign this release that says you know it hasn't been vetted, it's been wormed and you have 48 hrs to get it checked out and you can bring it back, otherwise, adopter beware. I had to agree to have him neutered by 6 mos. and send in proof.
I'm torn in this area. I think it's important to screen adopters and buyers (in the case of breeders) so the animals are going to the best possible situation. But finances make that difficult to impossible for some shelters/rescues/breeders. And I worry that the harder you make the adoption process, the fewer animals get placed and the more attractive you make the puppy store seem. When I was looking for a dog when I first moved to VA, we went to the SPCA first. They grilled us so badly and asked so many way out there "What if" questions that my ex eventually said "It's just a dog!" and hung up on them. (He was/is kinda a putz) It did put us off trying to rescue or adopt because we assumed all places would be like that, so we started looking into breeders. What's funny was that the first question all the breeders asked was about allergies and the SPCA never asked that question! It's what helped us realize any old dog wasn't a good idea with a son who had severe allergies and asthma and lead us towards lower allergen dogs like bichons, poodles, and eventually (what we got) a terrier.
The shelter I adopted Woobie from does everything they possibly can and does have somewhat of a waiting period while applications are checked and the adopters are interviewed etc, so you can't just walk in and walk out with an animal. That does weed out some impulse adopters. But they don't have the resources to do home visits or follow ups, so some placements (even with friends of volunteers) have not ended the way they hoped.
I think it's really hard to balance the need to place animals and the level to which you're able/willing to evaluate potential adopters. Each group has to try to strike that balance in their own comfort zone with the resources they have available to them.