

Local pet owners who have used their yearly spay/neuter voucher from the Humane Society of Pagosa Springs can arrange for low-cost spay/neuter services through a program called Dogster's Spay & Neuter Program (D-SNiP), based in Durango, CO. They do not require the pet owner to fill out paperwork or qualify financially.
For more information, please visit the "Spay and Neuter Program" page of D-SNiP's website. Spay/neuter surgeries are performed at the Aspen Tree Animal Caring Center in Durango. Their phone number is 970-382-0100.
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The Cold Hard Facts on Pet Overpopulation
A View From Both Sides of the Issue
From The Bill Foundation
Pet overpopulation is a huge problem throughout the United States and around the world. Some say that there are just too many pets and not enough good homes. Others say that there ARE enough good homes, but that people are getting their pets from the wrong sources ... pet stores, breeders and online (99% of those pets are not spayed/neutered so they then contribute to the surplus pet problem) instead of adopting from rescues and shelters.
Having our pets altered is a solid and effective defense against overpopulation in that it places fewer and fewer offspring in kill shelters.
Below are a few of the grisly statistics about pet overpopulation compiled by national publications and animal welfare organizations.
- It costs U.S. taxpayers an estimated $2 billion each year to round up, house, kill and dispose of homeless animals. (USA Today)
- Over 56% of dogs and puppies entering shelters are killed, based on reports from over 1,055 facilities across America. (National Counsel on Pet Population Study)
- An estimated 5 million cats and dogs are killed in shelters each year. That's one about every six and one half seconds. (The Humane Society of the United States)
- Millions more are abandoned, only to suffer from illness or injury before dying. (Doris Day Animal League)
- In six years one unspayed female and her offspring can reproduce 67,000 dogs. (Spay USA)
- Less than 3% of dog guardians are responsible for surplus births. (Save Our Strays)
- The perceived high cost of altering is not the problem, but the lack of education on its benefits. On average it costs approximately $100 to capture, house, feed and eventually kill a homeless animal - a cost that ultimately comes out of our pockets. Low cost spay/neuter services are far below that amount. (Doris Day Animal League)
- The cost of having a pregnant female can be much higher than the cost of spaying.
- Seven dogs and cats are born every day for each person born in the U.S. Of those, only 1 in 5 puppies and kittens say in their original home for their natural lifetime. The remaining 4 are abandoned to the streets or end up at a shelter. (The Humane Society of the United States)
- Each day 10,000 humans are born in the U.S. and each day 70,000 puppies and kittens are born. As long as these birth rates exist, there will never be enough homes for all the animals. (Spay USA)
- The public acquires only 14% of its pets from shelters; 48% get their pets as strays, from friends, from animal rescuers; 38% get their pets from breeders or pet stores (The Humane Society of the United States)
- Only 30% of dog guardians are aware of the pet-overpopulation problem. (Massachusetts SPCA survey 1993)
- In a study of relinquishment of cats and dogs in 12 U.S. animal shelters, 30% of the surrendered dogs were purebreds. The same study indicated that 55% of the surrendered dogs and 47% of the surrendered cats were unaltered. (Journal of Applied Animal Welfare Science)

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The Humane Society of the United States provided these statistics:
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Number of cats and dogs entering shelters each year:
8–10 million (HSUS estimate)
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Number of cats and dogs euthanized by shelters each year:
4–5 million (HSUS estimate)
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Number of cats and dogs adopted from shelters each year:
3–5 million (HSUS estimate)
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Number of cats and dogs reclaimed by owners from shelters each year:
Between 600,000 and 750,000—15–30% of dogs and 2–5% of cats entering shelters (HSUS estimate)
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Number of animal shelters in the United States:
Between 4,000 and 6,000 (HSUS estimate)
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Percentage of dogs in shelters who are purebred:
25% (HSUS estimate)
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Average number of litters a fertile dog can produce in one year: 2
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Average number of puppies in a canine litter: 6-10
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What About Colorado?
According to statistics compiled by the Colorado Department of Agriculture, more than 173,000 dogs and cats entered Colorado shelters in 2006. More than 43,000 of those pets were euthanized. Many of these animals were purebred. Even if homes are found for animals born from "accidental litters," many of these animals will end up in shelters, or reproduce themselves and contribute to these statistics. -- Spay Colorado
Spay Colorado is a program of the Foundation for Protection of Animals based in Durango, Colorado. Their mission is to end the suffering of innocent dogs and cats by reducing the number of unwanted births in the state of Colorado.
Why You Should Spay or Neuter Your Pet
The Humane Society of the United States
Spaying or neutering your pet is an important decision for pet owners. As animal lovers who value our pets, it is important to understand the impact of this decision. It happens everywhere.
In every community, in every state, there are homeless animals. In the U.S. as a whole, there are an estimated 6-8 million homeless animals entering animal shelters every year. About half of these animals are adopted, and tragically, the other half are euthanized. These are healthy, sweet pets who would have made great companions.
The number of homeless animals varies by state—in some states there are as many as 300,000 homeless animals euthanized in animal shelters every year. These are not the offspring of homeless "street" animals—these are the puppies and kittens of cherished family pets and even purebreds.
Yes, your pet's offspring could end up as shelter animals.
Many people believe that their pet's puppies or kittens would never become homeless shelter animals. But the reality is that every time the dog finds his way under the fence to visit the neighbor's female dog, or the indoor/outdoor cat comes back home pregnant again, the result is a litter of dogs or cats. Even if they are placed into homes, it is still possible for them to end up in shelters once they become "hard to handle," or for them to reproduce further and for the next generation of puppies or kittens to wind up homeless.
Many people are surprised to learn that nationwide more than 3 million cats and dogs are euthanized in shelters. Spay/neuter is the only permanent, 100-percent effective method of birth control for dogs and cats.
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Myths and Facts About Spaying & Neutering
The Humane Society of the United States
Think you know all the facts on pet overpopulation?
The most important thing to know about spaying and neutering is that it saves lives. In every community in every U.S. state, there are animals sitting in animal shelters waiting for homes. Only about half of those dogs and cats will ever get one. The other half will be euthanized.
Here is the truth behind some commonly spread myths about spaying and neutering ………….
MYTH: It's better to have one litter before spaying a female cat.
FACT: Every litter counts. Medical evidence indicates just the opposite. In fact, the evidence shows that females spayed before their first heat are typically healthier. Many veterinarians now sterilize dogs and cats as young as eight weeks of age. Check with your veterinarian about the appropriate time for these procedures.
MYTH: I want my children to experience the miracle of birth.
FACT: The miracle of birth is quickly overshadowed by the thousands of animals euthanized in animal shelters in communities all across the country. Teach children that all life is precious by spaying and neutering your pets.
MYTH: But my pet is a purebred.
FACT: So is at least one out of every four pets brought to animal shelters around the country. There are just too many dogs and cats—mixed breed and purebred. About half of all animals entering shelters are euthanized.
MYTH: I want my dog to be protective.
FACT: It is a dog's natural instinct to protect home and family. A dog's personality is formed more by genetics and environment than by sex hormones.
MYTH: I don't want my male dog or cat to feel like less of a male.
FACT: Pets don't have any concept of sexual identity or ego. Neutering will not change a pet's basic personality. He doesn't suffer any kind of emotional reaction or identity crisis when neutered.
MYTH: My pet will get fat and lazy.
FACT: The truth is that most pets get fat and lazy because their owners feed them too much and don't give them enough exercise.
MYTH: But my dog (or cat) is so special, I want a puppy (or kitten) just like her.
FACT: Your pet's puppies or kittens have an unlikely chance of being a carbon copy of your pet. Even professional breeders cannot make this guarantee. There are shelter pets waiting for homes who are just as cute, smart, sweet, and loving as your own.
MYTH: It's expensive to have my pet spayed or neutered.
FACT: Many low-cost options exist for spay/neuter services. Most regions of the U.S. have at least one spay/neuter clinic within driving distance that charge $100 or less for the procedure, and many veterinary clinics provide discounts through subsidized voucher programs. Low-cost spay/neuter is more and more widely available all the time.
MYTH: I'll find good homes for all the puppies and kittens.
FACT: You may find homes for your pet's puppies and kittens. But you can only control what decisions you make with your own pet, not the decisions other people make with theirs. Your pet’s puppies and kittens, or their puppies or kittens, could end up in an animal shelter, as one of the many homeless pets in every community competing for a home. Will they be one of the lucky ones?