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'Foreclosed Upon Pets,' Other Charities Find Homes For Dogs And Cats When Owners Lose Theirs (PHOTOS)

Fupi

By SUE MANNING   07/24/12 02:08 PM ET  AP

LOS ANGELES -- Carla Waller believes in promises. She was married for 37 years, held one job for 35 and never adopted a pet she didn't keep for life. Until now.

Waller and her husband Dennis moved to Las Vegas in 2006 and put $100,000 down on a $330,000 home. They adopted Jake, a 3-year-old, lean, shy Cocker spaniel. They both sold furniture on commission and thought they were set for retirement and beyond.

Dennis was diagnosed with terminal cancer in 2008 and died in 2009. Carla stayed home to care for him, but returned to work to make ends meet. She adopted Marilyn Monroe, a schnauzer-collie, to keep Jake company. A friend added Jewels the cat to the mix.

The recession stripped her home of a third of its value. Then health problems left her unable to work.

Foreclosure is just around the corner, said Waller, 67. "I know I'm a couple of months out. I can't do it anymore. I don't have the income," she said. "I'm done. There is nothing I can do now."

The hardest call she had to make was to Foreclosed Upon Pets, Inc., to arrange for homes for Jake, Marilyn and Jewels so she can move in with relatives.

"I am very depressed about it and very concerned about where they go because I took them for life and life is not what it should be," she said.

Waller's story is all too familiar to Everett Croxson, who founded Las Vegas-based FUPI (rhymes with puppy) in 2008.

Croxson, 59, a retired business consultant, was guided by hometown headlines.

_ Nevada had the worst foreclosure rate nationally for 62 months until March.

_ Nevada has the highest unemployment rate in the nation at 11.6 percent.

_ The Animal Foundation in Las Vegas runs the highest volume single-facility shelter in the country. It takes in close to 50,000 animals a year. Nearly two-thirds have to be euthanized.

In 2009, Croxson bought a five-bedroom home to use as a transition house for the pets. FUPI placed 348 pets that year.

In 2010, it was nearly 500; in 2011, 570; and this year it will be more than 600, Croxson said.

FUPI also works with the unemployed and those too ill or old to handle their pets, but about 30 percent of their pets are foreclosures, Croxson said.

"Real estate agents or cleaning crews call all the time. Maybe they have found a couple of cats in a closet of a foreclosed home," he said.

In Arizona, which bumped Nevada from the top of the foreclosure rankings in March, the Lost Our Home Pet Foundation in Phoenix does similar work. Founded in 2008, it also relies primarily on fosters although it did open a small shelter in April.

There are about 40 animals in the shelter and 220 in foster care. More than 2,000 have been placed in four years, said founder-executive director Jodi Polanski.

As a mortgage loan officer, Polanski heard story after story, so she started the rescue in her spare time. There was too much work, so she became full-time director and now she and two employees work with 120 volunteers and fosters.

Lost Our Home runs a food bank and a temporary care program for dogs belonging to homeless entering shelters. The dogs are kept for 90 days so owners can get back on their feet.

In Arizona's Maricopa County, foreclosed homeowners have turned into renters. "Landlords can be pickier and not allow pets or they can require large pet deposits," Polanski said, forcing people to give up some or all of their animals. The problem will exist until people can qualify for home loans again, she said.

"The economy is looking better in a lot of places, but it's not better for the animals right now," Polanski added.

There is no charge to a person relinquishing an animal, but adopters pay $150 per animal at FUPI, $75 for cats and $195 for dogs at Lost Our Home. A vet's exam, sterilization, shots and a microchip are included.

Polanski said the worst part of her job is turning pets away. "We do have limitations. We have a waiting list. It breaks our hearts every day when there are pets we can't help," she said.

A few weeks ago, FUPI rescued two Shih Tzus from an elderly woman who was being transferred to a home for dementia patients. Their fur was so matted with feces, dirt and food, they had to be shaved.

"She loved her dogs, she just didn't know the state they were in," Croxson said.

In addition to its own placements, FUPI sends between eight and 14 Animal Foundation dogs to Canada each week, where a pet store chain houses and places them.

"It's absolutely helpful to our organization to have rescues like FUPI," said Carly Scholten, Animal Foundation's director of operations.

In addition to a website and weekly adoption events, Croxson is taking part in county meetings designed to find ways to place more animals, and he does a weekly radio show to recruit volunteers and talk about pets.

For Croxson, the worst part of helping is the loss, guilt and remorse he sees when owners say goodbye to their pets.

He works hard to find homes he believes would please them.

Waller told him Jake needs someone by his side, day and night. "He's an old person's dog, though he's great with kids. His favorite thing to do is lie at your side."

No matter what, she said, "I hope my puppies are loved as much as I love them."

___

Online:

SLIDESHOW: PETS ADOPTED BY FUPI
Loading Slideshow...
  • Leila

    Foreclosed Upon Pets, Inc. is one of several charities that swoops in to find homes for dogs and cats when their owners face foreclosure and can't take their four-legged friends with them.

  • Abbi (Beagle) and Max (Boston Terrier)

    Foreclosed Upon Pets, Inc. is one of several charities that swoops in to find homes for dogs and cats when their owners face foreclosure and can't take their four-legged friends with them.

  • Babe

    Foreclosed Upon Pets, Inc. is one of several charities that swoops in to find homes for dogs and cats when their owners face foreclosure and can't take their four-legged friends with them.

  • Oliver

    Foreclosed Upon Pets, Inc. is one of several charities that swoops in to find homes for dogs and cats when their owners face foreclosure and can't take their four-legged friends with them.

  • Ernie

    Foreclosed Upon Pets, Inc. is one of several charities that swoops in to find homes for dogs and cats when their owners face foreclosure and can't take their four-legged friends with them.

  • Moth

    Foreclosed Upon Pets, Inc. is one of several charities that swoops in to find homes for dogs and cats when their owners face foreclosure and can't take their four-legged friends with them.

  • Xenia

    Foreclosed Upon Pets, Inc. is one of several charities that swoops in to find homes for dogs and cats when their owners face foreclosure and can't take their four-legged friends with them.

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LOS ANGELES -- Carla Waller believes in promises. She was married for 37 years, held one job for 35 and never adopted a pet she didn't keep for life. Until now. Waller and her husband Dennis moved to...
LOS ANGELES -- Carla Waller believes in promises. She was married for 37 years, held one job for 35 and never adopted a pet she didn't keep for life. Until now. Waller and her husband Dennis moved to...
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08:18 AM on 07/27/2012
The bill should be sent to the banks and I would say the banks should find the animals homes. But they throw people on the streets also.
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ginadeoliveira2008
Seen a shooting star tonight and I thought of you
07:08 PM on 07/26/2012
Poor Carla, what a hard story of losses. Wishing her the best with her relatives. God bless you
01:00 PM on 07/26/2012
The banks have been illegally foreclosing on honest and hardworking American citizens for decades via false placement of Force-Placed Insurance premiums. The artificially inflated premiums are responsible for tripling mortgage payments, and creating negative escrow accounts, leaving many homeowners unable to even pay property taxes on their homes.

Read the firsthand account of my journey to expose the largest banking fraud in history here: http://thoughtforyourpenny.blogspot.com/2012/07/the-boy-who-cried-force-placed.html
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
mustbelove
Rumi wannabe
06:50 PM on 07/25/2012
After Hurricane Katrina, many pets were separated from their owners, but they worked out something so that the pets could be re-united with their people when the time was right. How was this worked out? I would love to begin an organization that would offer a "fostering program". I imagine it on a big farm where hundreds of animals could live together and their people could get updates, etc..

Even if they could only pay a dollar a week to keep them there, it could save so many from such intense heartbreak.

I am living on a disability check. Sometimes I worry, I'll end up so poor I'll lose my house and I'll have to give up my pets. The pain would be so unbearable. :(

I will make a prayer for all the ppl and pets who suffer because of our economy.
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averagezoe
Don't breed or buy while homeless animals die!
06:39 PM on 07/25/2012
Unless you are in the animal rescue field, you wouldn't get it. But with the way things are and the millions of homeless animals in this country, the kindest thing any pet owner who can no longer care for them can do is take the pet(s) to his own vet and hold them while they are being euthanized. People who surrender their pets to shelters have no idea where they will end up or the trauma they go through. Anyone who loves their dog or cat should at least have the compassion to spare them an uncertain future, being put to sleep by uncaring shelter staff or possibly a lifetime of pain. Overpopulation is a reality and it's not getting any better because of greedy breeders and people who don't spay and neuter. It is inconceivable to me that anyone would think leaving their beloved pet at a shelter where its future is more than uncertain is any worse than humane euthanasia.
02:34 PM on 07/25/2012
Facebook PetsonDeathRow, UrgentDeathRowDogs, UrgentOhioDogs, UrgentDogsofMiami, CollinCountyAnimalsinDanger, Urgent.Wise.Co.Animals, LawrenceCountyDogShelter, UrgentCatsofMiami, NYCUrgentCats, sapetsalive, PAAStx, IrvingAnimalShelter, UrgentAnimalsinKilleen, Urgentbcas, NoKillTexas, TNDeathRowDogs, FriendsofArizonaShelterAnimals, FOSCGA, AnimalRescueNewOrleans, UrgentDogsAtBranchCountyAcQuincyMI, GastonACNCavailablepets, ocshelterdogs, Helpmexicandogs, AlaskanShelterDogs or justiceokanimals. PetHarbor and The Humane Society also have pictures of shelter animals online.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
olitenup
09:04 AM on 07/25/2012
Animal shelters are being swamped by people turning their pets in thinking the pets will be saved. Many times, it is those pets that get euthanized first. People need to check to see if their local shelter is a "kill" shelter and if so, what is the policy of re-homing or euthanizing.

Please do not place your pet on Craig's List, as "Free" as many of them end up as "bait" dogs for dog fighting rings.
10:49 AM on 07/25/2012
My local shelter has a surrender contract. If someone brings their pet in to surrender it, right above where they sign, it discusses the very real possibility of euthanasia. If the person called ahead and set up an appointment, the staff usually got the basic information on the animal and discussed the possibility right away on the phone - if the animal is older, has health problems, behavioral issues (a bite history)... at least when I was there, it was made pretty clear that even in the best of times, the outcome was not likely to be sunny. It was never any kind of fun to have that conversation with someone, but the honesty was there.
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mlaiuppa
Pres. Sarcasm Society. Like we need your approval.
01:21 PM on 07/25/2012
Don't give them to PETA either. Over 90% of their pets are never adopted. I'll let you guess what PETA does to them.Big hint. They are NOT a no-kill shelter.
08:55 AM on 07/25/2012
That is a french bulldog with mini pinser mix.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
karen lyons kalmenson
i poem/paint, sometimes, i ain't
08:47 AM on 07/25/2012
animals always bear the brunt of human's miseries.

i am glad that there are people out there that are helping those who cannot help themselves.

and i am so sad that those people, without homes, have to lose those beings closest to their hearts.
07:56 AM on 07/25/2012
In a survival situation a pet is both a luxury and a huge encumbrance.
Glad there might be a place to take them in.
The Horse shelters near us are overwhelmed with dumped horses.
Too expensive to keep and feed.
A lot of folks are not that responsible with pets or farm animals and thats a fact.
04:07 AM on 07/25/2012
What this kind of thing means is that any of the rest of us who are not on the verge of homelessness should take in additional pets, rescues of course. If you only have one or two, you can take another. Your cat will get used to it and your dog will love it. It's your duty.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Ravyn
03:45 AM on 07/25/2012
Just heartbreaking to see good people like Waller having so much tragedy and then to have to give up their beloved pets, too. The people like Croxson and Polanski and the people who work with them are just angels to be doing this type of rescue work. I know I often think very badly of people who tire of pets and casually dump them at shelters but then I read of people Waller who simply have no choice and, as a pet owner, it just breaks my heart. I know it breaks the hearts of the pets, too, who can't understand why they're losing their favorite person (I know how stressed my cats get just going to the vet.) and may now be living in a cage instead of a warm living room.

While I can't think of what cold helped Waller given her situation, there are a few things which need to be done all across the U.S. which could relieve part of the problem of some distressed pet owners in the rental market. More rental property owners need to show more compassion in this recession to pet owners and they could simply charge up front pet deposits to cover the replacement of apartment carpeting, and other potential damage, and then allow more people to keep pets in rental properties within reason, i.e. no more than two large dogs, or three small dogs and/or cats.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Angie Daniels
Nerd, Democrat, PFLAG, taxpayer, animal lover.
01:18 AM on 07/25/2012
Hope things turn out well for these people. Last year I got evicted (but not legally thankfully -- not on my record). I have a beloved dog and we found a 300 sq foot studio that would let me take her. It's a tight fit, but I was able to keep her. Two weeks ago I had heart surgery... my best friends kept her for me during this time. I pray that I'm able to keep her over time. Saying a word for these families. (and no, ironically, I'm not a religious person... I just know that sometimes we need a little extra help)
12:53 AM on 07/25/2012
Damn.

SPAY YOUR PET!
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MSROADKILL612
love auto biographys. any appS to write mine?
12:57 AM on 07/25/2012
agree, but this is about abandonmentt
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ZenSufi
Sisters and Brothers of America!
01:26 AM on 07/25/2012
Abandon Mitt? You're talking about Seamus, right?
ndmy
Who, me?
09:01 AM on 07/31/2012
STERILIZE your pets. SPAY your pet if it's female, NEUTER your pet if it's male. C'mon, Dennis, you're smarter than that, aren't you?
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MSROADKILL612
love auto biographys. any appS to write mine?
12:49 AM on 07/25/2012
Maybe some of you should consider a second dog

they say its; calming, good company for the incumbent dog - esp if its home alone a lot