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Safe Haven Dog Transfer Code of Ethics
While we do strive to have most of the animals under our care adopted locally
(so that we may more directly monitor their care and wellbeing); in order to
save the greatest number of Delaware’s animals and to make animals available
for adoption in regions and states where there are few animals (so that people do not have to resort to buying animals,
in turn supporting puppy mills and backyard breeders), Safe Haven transfers
our animals only to reputable, No-Kill, shelters.
Safe Haven does not transfer to regions or states
were cats or dogs are still being put down for space reasons (ex. Dogs may be only transferred to regions or states that do
not put down dogs for space, ex. Cats may not be transferred to regions or states that put down cats for space). Safe Haven only transfers animals to established
No-Kill shelters that do not put down animals for space or treatable health reasons. Safe Haven gives preference
to shelters with animal “control”/protection contracts in their county and surrounding counties in order to have
more of a safety net for our animals. Safe Haven mainly transfers animals to established
organizations with physical shelter space, not to “foster-only” groups Safe Haven may at times
transfer dogs to shelters that occasionally put down dogs for behavioral reasons, but only with a signed agreement that
the organization will return the dog to Safe Haven, and not put it down, if it exhibits behaviors they deem unacceptable,
even after an adoption. Safe Haven may occasionally transfer a dog to a Breed-specific rescue organization,
provided that each organization; is individually evaluated, proves a national affiliation, shows it has existed for at least
3 years, adheres to a No-Kill policy (including for behavioral issues), accepts mix-breeds, and the dog is altered before
transfer Safe Haven, as all ethical shelters that have a transport program, engages in a system of sending (and in the future,
receiving) a “fair-sampling” animals. This means that the sending
shelter sends not only harder to place animals, but also easy to place dogs (like puppies, small dogs, and pure breeds).
The receiving shelter accepts both easy to place dogs, but also harder to place animals (such as Heartworm-positive dogs,
Pit Bulls, and older dogs). This is considered a fair balanced exchange, allowing the shipping shelter to focus limited
resources on dogs that are easier to adopt, while not completely exempting them from the responsibility of caring for all
types of animals. The receiving shelter in turn uses their greater resources to help special-needs animals, while
still receiving some easy to adopt animals that will bring more adopter traffic into their shelter, hence adopting out more
and being able to take in more animals in the future.
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