10 comments to “The Lost Dogs Home; 3,525 pets adopted, 11,872 pets killed, income $12,375,271”

  1. James Hothersall | December 29, 2011 | Permalink

    You could pretty much insert RSPCA SA or AWL for LDH.

    On Christmas night I found a dog on a main road in Adelaide (an old, fat red heeler with a limp). I took it to an emergency vet for a scan as it had no collar. No Chip. They decided to turn her over to the council. I had to pretend to be the dogs owner the next day to get it out (Adelaide has a central lockup system before moving) as the AWL hold the contract for my area. As my vet said…. yes the AWL yould have put her down at the vet check I organised the next day.

    Today I had a knock on my door from the council with animal control… after the mandatory 72 hours had expired so the dog would have been dead by then.

    Luckily before the council visit her owners had come back from holiday and managed to track me down from one of the multiple places I had put her desctription.

    This is what it has come to….lies and dirty tricks to save a life… her owners had no idea she would have been dead…. the council didnt care…but she certainly did appreciate her two days with me.

    The moral of the story is the system is failing and there is nothing but apathy

  2. AWDRI | December 29, 2011 | Permalink

    AWDRI saved nearly a thousand (final figures not yet tallied) with less than $350K and only 3 PTS due to ailing health issues with only wonderful volunteers and no operational shelter. With additional funding even more would have been saved. NO KILL can be achieved and should be the ambition of all shelters in this country.

    The animals others label dangerous we can handle and so often are dissappointed that councils will not release to any other than the RSPCA due to their undeserved labelling by unqualified people. Of course this label is nearly always a death sentence to these dogs. A pound environment is the worst possible place for a working dog so why would any inexperienced amateur attempt any sort of behavioural assessment there?

    Change will come and we will continue to strive for it.

  3. Susan Seymour | December 29, 2011 | Permalink

    Poor voiceless animals. Greed will always be the motivator for some humans. Those who care about animals have to continue to shout, LOUDLY

  4. Lawyersforcompanionanimals | December 30, 2011 | Permalink

    Thank you for taking the time to write such a well-researched blog. I think there are not only animal welfare issues at stake here but also consumer deception issues at play.

    I have noticed that the LOST DOGS HOME have changed their home page. It now says “compassion and care since 1910”. It used to say “100% commitment to re-homing savable pets” (or similar). I asked lots of questions about what “rehomable” meant on several open Facebook pages. This was around 5 weeks ago.

    Rather odd that there has been this change as I recall that claim “100% commitment to re-homing savable pets” (or similar) to have been on their website for some time.

    Discussions with a former staff member have revealed that the LDH watches Facebook and Internet sites regularly where critical discussions are taking place. Clearly this open discussion and questioning is having an effect.

    Graeme Smith calls people who speak out Cyber bullies. I wonder what words he has for people who mislead the public into thinking they are animal welfare when really animal management and kill such high numbers of animals while at the same time venturing interstate for council contracts.

    I understand that when LDH took over the council contract in QLD (Brisbane area) staff from Melbourne were sent up to Brisbane to work for them. Why not use the existing local staff (assuming this information is correct)?

  5. Lisa J Ryan | January 1, 2012 | Permalink

    The community have the power and the ability to change this – get inspired people and start questioning and advocating for these impounded Victorian ‘pets’ and keep questioning and advocating.

    “Freedom is never voluntarily given by the oppressor; it must be demanded by the oppressed.”
    Martin Luther King, Jr.)

    “Success is not measured by what you accomplish, but by the opposition you have encountered, and the courage with which you have maintained the struggle against overwhelming odds.”
    Orison Swett Marden)

  6. Robyn Knobel | January 1, 2012 | Permalink

    We have been big supporters of the Lost dogs Home ,but are devastated to read these statistics,truly appalling ,and feel we have been misled .This needs to be addressed.We will be reviewing our support of this organization.

  7. Tegan | January 1, 2012 | Permalink

    “This means for every single one of the pets the organisation processes, they make a whopping $536” – This is just staggering. What I couldn’t do with that much per animal that comes through my care! Thank-you so much for maintaining your blog and continuing to publish such alarming statistics. I hope it’s reaching the right people.

  8. Debbie Mole | January 4, 2012 | Permalink

    Shocking amount of money to be made, knowing that so many animals are killed. With this profit you would expect some serious change in how animals are rehoused. being part of many animal charities this is serious money that really should be affecting the lives of cats and dogs, not ending them.

  9. kerry | January 5, 2012 | Permalink

    Why would LDH spend money desexing, microchipping, and vaccinating a pet when they are getting $536 for just killing it.

  10. Lee | January 5, 2012 | Permalink

    Thank you, Saving Pets, for collating this information. Here’s hoping it goes viral.

    Re “Sadly there is no guarantee that every pet can be reached in time, before the worst happens.”

    I’d suggest that ‘the worst’ would be ending up in LDH’s hands.

    James – Good on you for saving the heeler’s life and having the nouse to play the system. It’s sad that you had to go to those lengths.

    Robyn – I hope that you stop supporting LDH and will switch your financial support to a no kill shelter or rescue organisation. When you do, please make it very clear to LDH why you’re jumping ship. Clearly, it’s only when they start haemorrhaging financially that they’ll change their ways.

    I used to make monthly donations to LDH, before I found out about them. I’ve now cancelled all donations to kill shelters and support no kill and rescue organisations instead. When I cancelled the last one, I told them that I was switching to a no kill organisation, via email. The email exchange suggested that the person fully understood my reasons and didn’t like what the shelter was doing, either.