Staff at a London animal shelter have seen more than their fair share of abandoned pets over the years, from kittens in boxes to budgies dropped outside in the dead of night.
However, lately there has been a surge in the numbers as people make the heartbreaking decision to give up their animal companions, no longer able to afford to care for their pets.
Struggling animal owners are feeling “a lot of heartache ... and also shame and frustration that they’re having to make these decisions,” said Elvira Meucci-Lyons, the boss of the Mayhew shelter in Kensal Green, west London. “They come to us because they feel they have no choice.”
Photo: AFP
“Behind every animal we take in there’s a human story,” Meucci-Lyons said.
The small center has taken in more than 130 animals this year alone. It is part of a wider rise across the UK, where tens of thousands of pets have been abandoned since the COVID-19 pandemic and the onset of a cost-of-living crisis.
In the first few months of this year, more than 5,700 abandonments have been reported to the Royal Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals (RSPCA) — a 32 percent rise from the same period last year, which had about 22,500 cases reported over the 12 months, up more than 7 percent from 2023.
The challenge of affording animal care poses a heart-wrenching problem for many in Britain, a nation of dog and cat lovers where half the adult population — more than 26 million people — has a pet, according to the RSPCA.
And it has hit the country’s poorest people especially hard.
Staff at Mayhew said that some owners were having to choose between feeding themselves or their pets.
Several pets at the center — including dogs Brownie, a one-year-old toy poodle, and Astro, a pocket American bully — were brought in because their owners lost their homes due to financial troubles.
Stories like these are “the most upsetting,” Meucci-Lyons said, because in hard times pet owners “need their lovely animals more than ever and the dog or cat doesn’t want to do without their owner.”
Mayhew staff said that more pets were also arriving at the center in Kensal Green in poor health, often because their owners cannot afford veterinary bills.
Felix’s case is typical. The muscular nine-year-old tomcat was playing with a length of string, but he arrived with tooth problems, with his owners bringing him to the shelter and saying they could not afford to keep him.
“We’re seeing quite a lot more needing dental work nowadays,” said Mayhew spokeswoman Olivia Patt.
The pandemic saw a spike in pet ownership under government lockdowns and a subsequent wave of people then giving up their animals as normal lifestyles resumed.
Some people are returning lockdown pets, several years on.
However, RSPCA spokesman David Bowles told reporters that living costs, which soared during the pandemic, have become a major factor driving abandonments.
“We are now five years on from the first lockdown under COVID. The RSPCA believes the cost-of-living crisis is really impacting people’s ability to pay for vet treatment in particular,” Bowles said.
UK inflation soared above 11 percent in October 2022, the highest level in more than four decades, and while it has slowed in the past few years, people are still feeling the squeeze.
Prices for many items, including pet food, have gone up by about 25 percent.
At Mayhew, staff have been doing all they can, from providing struggling owners with pet food and animal care packages, to offering free preventative treatments, but the pressure has pushed the shelter’s bubbly staff to their limits. “We are run off our feet, we can’t keep up with the demand,” Meucci-Lyons said.
Even though the staff are comforted by knowing they make a difference, “every day it is heartbreaking — we go to bed at night thinking about the dogs and cats we can’t help,” she said.
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