


According to the writer, a “Humane Society representative came out and told me that they only had 8 feral cat kennels, which were full, and that it would be over a week before they could assist me. Here are some of the “no-kill” animal shelter failures that made headlines in recent years for making animals suffer a fate far worse than a kind death.Īugust 2022/Silverdale, Washington: published a letter to the editor by a Port Orchard resident who alleged that a facility with “no-kill” policies that was partially funded with public monies and doing business as Kitsap Humane Society had refused to accept a homeless cat she’d taken to the facility for care. The lucky ones are taken to well-run open-admission animal shelters, where they either find a well-screened, permanent home or are painlessly euthanized in the arms of professionally trained, compassionate people.
