Foster A Shelter Animal
Enrich Their Lives and Yours!
Foster care volunteers provide temporary care for kittens, puppies, dogs and cats. Some animals may only need a home for several days, while others may need a few weeks. By offering your time, energy, and home to an animal in need, you prepare an animal for adoption into a permanent home as well as prevent overcrowding in our shelter. The Georgia SPCA is always looking for foster families to help save the lives of more animals.
Foster Care Choices
Foster candidates are carefully matched with foster homes according to the candidate's special needs and the foster parent's abilities. Whether you work full time or you spend most of your time at home, we'll help match you with a foster animal that fits your lifestyle.
Many foster parents have companion animals of their own. We recommend that foster parents keep their own companion animals isolated from their foster animals. A separate room or enclosed area with no carpet works best for a foster animal. For example, a warm spare bedroom or laundry room is an excellent place to foster a cat or kittens.
Support and Resources to Help You
The Georgia SPCA is here to help ensure your success as a foster parent. We'll offer you as much training as you need as well as supplies. Help from our staff is just a phone call away. Each of our foster parents is given a foster care manual and a 24-hour emergency number in case there are questions or problems arise.
Frequently Asked Questions
What kinds of animals need a foster?
· Kittens and cats with nursing kittens
· Puppies and dogs with nursing puppies
· Ill or injured animals that may need regular medication or medical attention
· Animals susceptible to stress from a shelter environment
It varies. As a foster parent you can choose the foster situation that is right for your family. In the case of a nursing mom with puppies or kittens, it would be from their intake date until the puppies or kittens are 8 or 9 weeks old. Once they are old enough to get spayed or neutered the surgery will be done and they stay at the Adoption Center for adoption. The time they spend with you would depend on their age at intake. We sometimes get kittens and puppies with no mom that will need to be bottle fed, and this would be a more time consuming commitment. In the case of injured or stressed animals, the length of time would be discussed with you prior to placement.
What are the requirements to be a foster parent?
Are there any expenses incurred by foster parents?
Can I keep a foster animal?
Why should I become a foster parent?
We believe that the abandoned and abused animals that enter our shelter deserve to have the best possible chance at finding a loving, permanent home. A foster parent has one of the most important jobs at the shelter. Foster parents allow our animals to receive the proper care and attention they deserve as they wait for adoption. As a foster parent you'll not only save the lives of animals in your care, but you'll give other animals coming into the shelter a space on our adoption floor and the opportunity to find their own loving home. If those aren't enough reasons to become a foster parent, consider these:
Ready to Be a Foster Parent?
Print and complete foster application, and
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