April 2026 Monthly Report

Learn about animal intakes, outcomes, return to owner rates, average length of stay, live-release rates, donation fund activity, and other agency statistics for April 2026.

 

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VIEW INTAKES AND OUTCOMES OVER TIME FROM SHELTER ANIMALS COUNT


Summary

The April 2026 monthly report includes return to owner (RTO) rates for found animals, average length of stay (LOS), and live-release-rates. These are key industry measures for the effectiveness of shelter operations to reunite or find placements for animals. There are also numbers of volunteer hours, and donation fund revenue, expenses, and balances.


Animal Intake

MCAS accepted stray dogs, sick, injured or at-risk adult cats and kittens from the public. Officers also picked up stray or lost animals. Owner-surrendered animals were accepted on a case by case basis, depending on urgent circumstances; adoption returns are also included in the total. Other intakes represent animals placed into emergency custody by Animal Services officers, injured wildlife, or shelter offspring.

Intake Type

Dog

Puppy

Cat

Kitten

Wildlife

Other

Total

Stray or at large

184

27

82

54

13

16

376

Owner Surrenders

38

2

20

0

0

0

60

All Other Intakes

14

2

4

0

4

0

24

Total Live Intake

236

31

106

54

17

16

460


Veterinary Care Provided

Animal Health and Animal Care staff provided a wide range of veterinary services to animals in care.

To keep animals healthy, Animal Health staff administered vaccinations, including rabies, DA2PP and Bordetella for dogs and puppies, and FVRCP for cats and kittens.  

They provided health exams and consultations, including routine exams, wound checks, pre-surgery checkups, behavior assessments, and reviewing test results or diagnoses with foster volunteers. 

Spay & Neuter Capacity Update

In April, 99% of adopted shelter animals received spay/neuter surgery, or were previously altered. Some pre-adoption spay & neuter surgeries were completed at Oregon Humane.

Veterinary Service

Cats

Kittens

Dogs

Puppies

Other

Total

Health Exams & Consults

287

171

453

53

196

1,009

Spay & Neuter Surgeries

48

20

73

10

3

154

Medications Administered

296

60

72

6

1

435

Tests & Diagnostics

6

13

2

3

0

24

Vaccinations

121

63

348

70

3

605

Other Vet Treatments

174

209

424

102

14

923

Total Services

932

536

1,372

244

217

3,150


Fostered Animals

The majority of animals in foster care were kittens, dogs, cats, other domestic animals, and puppies. Many animals entered and left foster care over the course of the month, so the total number represents the cumulative total, and not the maximum number of animals in care at one time. Thank you to 92 foster volunteers for your lifesaving service.

Animal type

Entered care

Previously in care

Total in foster care

Returned from care

Cats

20

24

44

23

Kittens

42

9

51

13

Dogs

29

6

35

23

Puppies

3

0

3

3

Other

0

29

29

26

Total

94

68

162

88


Animal Outcomes

Length of Stay (LOS)

Dog

Puppy

Cat

Kitten

Overall

Average Days

13

5

21

27

15

 

Return to Owner (RTO)*

Dog

Puppy

Cat

Kitten

Other

Total

Stray (No ID)

52%

50%

8%

0%

0%

28%

Stray (With ID)

73%

114%

52%

n/a

50%

71%

Average RTO Rate

61%

67%

21%

0%

6%

41%

*RTO is calculated only for reclaimed animals with a stray intake circumstance.

Live Release Rate (Live Outcomes / Total Outcomes)

Dog

Puppy

Cat

Kitten

Wildlife

Other

Domestic Total

Total

90%

100%

82%

68%

12%

89%

87%

85%

156 or 33% of animals were adopted.

160 or 33.8% of animals were reclaimed by their owners. The majority of animals represented in these outcomes were dogs with a license and/or microchip for owner-contact.

80 or 16.9% of animals were transferred to another agency.

61 or 12.9% of animals were humanely euthanized, including cases of injured wildlife, injured or severely sick cats and kittens, and other domestic animals for medical reasons, or for behavioral issues which would make an animal unsafe to place back into the community. Cat intake is officially limited to cases where the cat is sick or injured, or in immediate danger due to cruelty, neglect, and similar circumstances. There is decreased intake volume for cats, and an increased percentage of medically-recommended euthanasia for adult cats due to these intake conditions.

4 or 0.8% of animals were returned to the field at the location where they were found. 

9 or 1.9% of animals died unassisted while in care. 3 or 0.6% of animals were lost in care.

Outcome Type

Dog

Puppy

Cat

Kitten

Wildlife

Other

Total

Adopted

79

7

46

18

0

6

156

Reclaimed / returned to owner

123

19

17

0

0

1

160

Transferred to another agency

24

8

17

5

2

24

80

Euthanized

25

0

13

9

14

0

61

Return to field

0

0

3

0

0

1

4

Unassisted death

0

0

2

2

1

4

9

Other outcomes

0

0

3

0

0

0

3

Total

251

34

101

34

17

36

473

Transfers

MCAS transferred 80 or 16.9% of shelter animals to other shelters and rescues. Thank you to our community partners for your lifesaving work.

  • Oregon Humane
  • Hiss & Hers Herp Hobbies
  • Cat Adoption Team
  • Oregon Small Animal Resources Rescue
  • Oregon Humane -Salem Campus
  • Stumptown Strays
  • Silver Linings Rescue Ranch Dog Rescue
  • One Tail At A Time Dog Rescue, LLC
  • I Pawed It Forward
  • Bird Alliance Of Oregon
  • Oregon Boston Terrier Rescue
  • House Of Dreams
  • Bulldog Haven NW
  • Angels For Sara Sanctuary

Volunteers

Volunteer contributions are essential to our daily operations and the well-being of our community's animals. These efforts span a wide range of activities, from direct animal care to crucial operational support. A vital network of foster volunteers provides specialized, in-home care for our most vulnerable animals, including neonatal kittens, puppies, and those with medical or behavioral needs. At the shelter, volunteers ensure that animals receive daily exercise and socialization, facilitate adoption "meet and greets," and maintain clean, enriched living environments. Furthermore, they provide indispensable support for foundational needs, such as laundry and dishwashing, and offer assistance to administrative staff and during special events.

Thank you to our volunteers for your service to the pets and people of our community!

Volunteer Roles

Hours

Volunteers

FTE**

Adoption

182

13

1.03

Animal Health

51

8

0.29

Cattery

271

25

1.54

Cleaning

222

48

1.26

Dogs

705

66

4.00

Enrichment Prep

42

11

0.24

Events

0

0

0.00

Foster

3,984

92

22.64

Kitten Clinic

0

0

0.00

Office

29

2

0.17

Transport

13

2

0.08

Total

5,499

267

31.25

**FTE is the estimated equivalent number of full-time employees.


Online Resources

Many services provided by MCAS are accessible online, at multcopets.org. Members of the public can search for adoptable or lost / found pets, license their pets, and learn about other resources and news. MCAS website pages are translated into four languages.

Page Categories

Page Views

Adoptable Pets

169,706

Lost & Found Pets

57,519

Home Page Visits

24,994

Licensing Resources

18,991

News & Updates

5,107

Low-Cost Services

2,157

Kitten Resources

1,123

Field Services

2,304

Volunteering

2,338

Other Pages

23,505

Total

307,744


Donation Accounts (FY 2026 YTD)

Thank you to our donors for your support of animals in our care! Animal Services maintains donation funds restricted for specific purposes. Below is a summary for the fiscal year to date. More information about donation fund expense categories and program budgets can be reviewed on the Multnomah County Budget Office public dashboards, updated regularly.

Donation Fund

Beginning Balance

Revenue

Expenses

Ending Balance

Animal Care Fund (Dolly's Fund)

$686,522

$82,564

-$55,936

$713,150

Adoption & Outreach Fund

$568,426

$38,449

-$372,169

$234,706

Shelter Dreams Capital Fund

$45,754

$28,425

-$5

$74,174

Spay & Neuter Fund

$41,379

$31,766

-$27

$73,118

Total

$1,342,081

$181,204

-$428,137

$1,095,148


Field Services

Field Services officers responded to many urgent needs of community members and their pets, conducting welfare checks to investigate potential cases of cruelty or neglect, investigating bites, loose-aggressive animals, and picking up stray, injured, abandoned, potentially dangerous, or deceased animals. Officers also responded to non-urgent calls such as barking dogs, animal trespass, and other community issues.

Dispatch Category

Count

Percentage

Welfare Check

117

19%

Loose Animal- Injured / Aggressive / In Danger

50

8%

Dead

48

8%

Bite Investigation - Dog

48

8%

Loose Aggressive Follow-Up

45

7%

Loose Animal- Nuisance

44

7%

Emergency Custody

42

7%

Confined Animal- Not Urgent

38

6%

Confined Animal- Urgent

31

5%

Transport To/from Shelter/vet

28

5%

Possibly Abandoned

26

4%

Other

92

15%

Total

609

100%


Pet Licensing

MCAS issued 2,502 total new or renewed licenses.

Type

Cats

Dogs

Total

Licenses Issued

867

1,635

2,502

Thẻ
Monthly Report
Reports
Leonard (385549), a cat adopted in April 2026
Leonard (385549), a cat adopted in April 2026
Animal intake by type and circumstance - April 2026
Animal intake by type and circumstance - April 2026
Animals in foster care - April 2026
Animals in foster care - April 2026
Total animal outcomes - April 2026
Total animal outcomes - April 2026
Animal outcomes by type and circumstance - April 2026
Animal outcomes by type and circumstance - April 2026