From Reuters:
“Cash-strapped
Britons give up pets as living costs soar”
(Steve
Craddock, Centre Manager at Battersea Dogs and Cats Home, poses with cocker
spaniel called Harriet in London, Britain August 10, 2022.)
Stood on her hind
legs to greet any prospective owner who might approach her glass-doored kennel,
Harriet is a black English cocker spaniel abandoned as a deepening
cost-of-living crisis pushes growing numbers of Britons to part with their
pets. She was found running along a busy road in London after witnesses saw her
pushed out of a car and is one of 206 dogs and 164 cats currently being looked
after at rehoming centres run by the Battersea animal charity.
It is a similar
story at other centres across the country - with some seeing record inquiries
for dog and cat returns - as the tightest squeeze on living standards since at
least the 1960s forces many owners to decide the additional cost of food plus
hundreds of pounds in vet bills is no longer manageable. "We are concerned
that's going to be an increasing reason for people bringing their dogs in to
Battersea," Steve Craddock, who manages the centre in soutwest London,
told Reuters. Exotic pets such as snakes and lizards are also proving too
expensive due to their need for specialist heating and lighting. Three snakes,
including an 8-foot (2.4-metre) boa constrictor, were recently dumped in pillow
cases outside a reptile shop, the Royal Society for the Prevention of Cruelty
to Animals (RSPCA) told Reuters. The trend, which follows a surge in demand for
pets during COVID-19 pandemic lockdowns in a country known for its love of
animals, comes as households brace for energy bills to more than triple in
January on last year, hammering people's incomes.
A NEW
FINANCIAL CRASH
(December the
kitten lies in his kennel at Battersea Dogs and Cats Home, in London, Britain
August 10, 2022.)
Dogs Trust,
which currently has 692 dogs needing homes in 21 centres across the country,
said the last time it had seen anything like this was in the wake of the 2008
financial crash. "This cost-of-living crisis has crept up on us a lot more
quickly than people ever expected," said the Trust's operations director
Adam Clowes. Such is the pressure that the charity is considering whether it
should expand an emergency support fund, normally reserved for people on
welfare benefits who need short-term financial support to keep their pets, to
more middle income earners.
Animal
charities say they are also worried the squeeze on living standards will have
an impact on donations, though they are not seeing this yet. At Battersea, some
pets are being rehomed. Magpie is a British short hair cat who arrived pregnant
after her owner of two years realised that they could not afford the kittens.
All of her four kittens have now been found new homes. But that is unlikely to
be the case for most animals, with another charity, Woodgreen, saying
applications to adopt animals have dropped to the 100s a month from around
10,000 during lockdowns. Pilar Gómez-Igbo, an assistant editor, could have been
one potential owner, but having done some research she is now worried about the
extra costs. "As the change in living costs became more evident, yes
definitely, it joined the list of things to seriously consider," she said.
"I will make myself wait a little."
^ Only pure
Evil People do this (in the UK, the US or anywhere.) It is one thing to bring
your Pet to a Shelter when you can't afford them - that is extremely sad - and
another thing to simply abandon your Pet in a harmful way - that is pure Evil.
I only hope
these People suffer the same abandonment when they are Old.
This only adds
more hard work and added costs on all the Shelters and Organizations that have
been struggling for years. ^
https://www.reuters.com/world/uk/cash-strapped-britons-give-up-pets-living-costs-soar-2022-08-14/
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