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While much of the country is under orders to shelter at home, rescue groups across the country have reported skyrocketing interest in adoption and fostering. But considering that in most cities pounds and rescue groups are deemed nonessential businesses, the organizations have had to get creative about how they introduce their animals to the public while making sure the homes they do go to are the right fit.
In South Dakota, Alaska, Utah, Virginia, Washington, Oregon, Minnesota, California and beyond, many rescue groups have pivoted to virtual meet and greets and adoptions.
Rocket Dog Rescue in Oakland, California, is just one of the many groups who have taken their efforts online. Each Saturday at noon, the group posts a collection of 30-second to two-minute long clips on its Facebook page. Each video starts off listing that dog’s stats (like their name, age, breed and weight) before switching to more intangibles that could encourage or deter potential pet parents, like personality traits, likes and dislikes, health needs, and assorted quirks (like Rex’s hoarding tendency or another dog’s need to bark at passersby).
From there, those interested can follow the accompanying link to the application site.
Pali Boucher, the manager at Rocket Dog Rescue, said the demand has been astounding.
“We’ll put the videos up at noon, and within five minutes we will have more than 10 applications for each dog,” Boucher said. “It’s been incredible. It’s the most demand we’ve ever seen. We almost don’t have enough dogs for the number of people who want them. The first day we had an unprecedented 500 applications.”
Usually, when the country isn’t in the grips of a pandemic, Rocket Dog Rescue will hold weekend meet and greet days at various staging areas around the San Francisco Bay. It’s much more casual: People can wander in, meet some dogs and, if they want to, fill out an application. There might be a few people who apply for the same dog, but the appetite is nowhere near what it’s seeing now.
Now the rescue group will sort through the applications submitted online and pick out which one they consider the strongest. That applicant is then invited to do a one-on-one FaceTime or Zoom interview with the foster. It allows them to ask questions and see how the pup interacts with the foster family as well as allows the foster to get a sense of the home and whether it would be a good fit for the dog’s energy level.
Like a first date, the virtual meeting allows both parties to determine if there are any dealbreakers, like if the dog needs a fenced yard and an active home, maybe isn’t good with cats and kids, or they have separation anxiety that manifests in destructive behavior.
Maranda Weathermon at West Valley City Animal Shelter in West Valley City, Utah, is operating her pet adoptions in a similar fashion. Weathermon said the one-on-one video interviews cover the same content as would be under normal circumstances, ranging from prior experience to an understanding of the commitment required to raise a pet.
“We talk about their household and we talk about expectations; it’s the same counseling experience as usual, with the same questions and same suggestions, just socially distant,” Weathermon said.
If everyone is on board, adoption paperwork is sent over digitally and a (socially distant) in-person meet and greet is scheduled where the potential adopters can introduce their existing pets (if they have any) and decide if they still want to take the new dog home.
Weathermon said she thinks the added hoops involved with going virtual mean those who do go through the process are more serious about adding to their family.
“I think it takes a lot of impulse out of an adoption,” Weathermon explained.
She added that while she’ll be happy when those interested in adopting can stroll through the kennels and meet a bunch of dogs at once again, elements of virtual adoptions will be something they’ll continue to utilize in a post-coronavirus world.
“Sometimes we’ll get a highly adoptable dog, like a English bulldog, and we’ll get people that want to adopt as far away as Kansas or Washington,” Weathermon said. “Now we know we can do virtual meetings and they can decide if they actually want to drive across state lines to meet the dog.”

Project Second Chance
Boucher echoed that sentiment, saying, “I think we’ve learned a lot in this process that we can add to our tool set going forward.”
Considering Rocket Dog Rescue is funded entirely by donations (which Boucher said dropped to zero overnight) and adoption fees, finding a way to continue to place dogs with their forever homes was paramount to keeping the rescue group afloat.
Tara Zurawski of Project Second Chance in Alexandria, Virginia, a group that specializes in rescuing former street animals in Puerto Rico, said her rescue also lives or dies by the cost of adoptions, so creativity was key.
While Project Second Chance has always had a strong social media presence and frequently does virtual interviews, it’s recently started asking hopeful families to submit supplemental materials showing their home, as actual home visits aren’t possible right now.
“We’ve gotten some really adorable videos, you know, like a five-year-old giving a tour of his home or a dad playing newscaster and interviewing the kids as to why they want a dog and who’s going to pick up the poop,” Zurawski said.
Zurawski said her group is also using Zoom and FaceTime to help council new pet parents and make sure everything is going well with their newest addition. It wants to make sure its adopters are set up to have a properly socialized dog in a socially distant time as well as mitigate the separation anxiety their new pet might feel when their parents transition back to working outside the home.
“We want families to understand that it’s important for a dog not to get ‘snowglobe syndrome,’ where the dog’s environment is so limited due to quarantine that when we all get our freedom back, that the dog is terrified of new environments or change and is not well socialized,” Zurawski said. “We discuss ways to do that safely during these times.”
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