Mortgage Crisis & Homeless Pets


This morning I read a post by Gina over at the Pet Connection blog regarding homeless animals and the housing market.

You might remember that I wrote about this last September as we were seeing the problem here in the local area following a 52% increase in foreclosures in August of 2007. You can research more on the foreclosure rates at RealtyTrac.

Anyway, thanks to Gina I found and read the article in the Sacramento Bee about homeless pets as innocent victims of the California housing market per Gina’s recommendation.

I can only ask, where have they been? This has been an increasing problem for at least five months if not more.

In fact, it was September of 2007 the Press Enterprise took a look at local shelters and humane societies who were seeing the trend of increased numbers of relinquished animals and the speculation was that the homeless pet increase was due to the mortgage crisis hitting San Bernardino and other parts of California.

Everybody has reported it–but what are they doing about it?

What can you do about it if you lose your home?

One thing to do is to prepare a pet resume. What is a pet resume? It is a document you present to potential landlords with a summary of a companion animal’s best qualities and that also highlights your qualities as a good tenant and pet owners.

Pet resumes should include an appealing picture of your pet, state the animal’s age, activity level, breed or pedigree, good behaviors, participation in training, and the standards of care he or she receives.

Get letters of recommendation from your pet’s trainer, groomer, activity groups, kennel or pet sitter. It wouldn’t hurt to also get letters from your immediate neighbors stating how your pet is a great canine or feline citizen and neighbor.

As for you, obtain letters of recommendation from past landlords and your realtor about your qualities as a home owner, tenant–and ask your community pals to write notes about how you are a good pet owning neighbor.

In addition, more and more pet friendly rental databases are popping up on the web. Try searching:

People with Pets
Move dot com

You can access my audio on pet resumes here or on iTunes under Ark Animal Answers.

Where is the newsletter and other ramblings…

If you are an avid fan and have subscribed to my newsletter, you will have noticed it is late. At the moment I am managing my own websites and blogs–so when we moved one to a new provider and format–well things went horribly wrong.

Maybe not horribly wrong, but certainly enough to tie me up in 10 hour days since January 1st. Lesson learned?

Couldn’t tell ya–other than I am learning a new platform pretty fast!

I have plans to overhaul https://www.arkanimals.com soon and that is going to be a task since the site has hundreds of pages. Be warned, we are probably going to move the blog into the main index page instead of inside the site. Still pondering this as there are many pros and cons to it.

Anyway, on the animal front I am sure you heard about another mountain lion attack on Laura Jirsa’s dog (Lady) in Evergreen, Colorado. The attack on the Queensland Heeler took place just a few days after I posted the cougar attack safety tips.

Wild animals are becoming more habituated to humans and pets are easy prey in their eyes. If you are going to go hiking in remote areas or wilderness corridors–take precautions and stack the cards in your favor. Hike with a friend and carry pepper spray or something similar. You can read an article with my mountain lion attack safety tips here.

Out in the blogging world, Sarah Netter brought up a question about who goes–the pet or the significant other…which made me curious–what is your opinion?