Being forced to put her house on the market by the real estate meltdown
was stressful enough for Kathryn Ecdao. Leaving
Roxy and Bear behind made matters much worse.
The 4-year-old Labrador-German shepherd mixes
weren't welcome at the rental Ecdao moved into a
few miles away. So she makes daily trips to her
now-empty former home in Anaheim Hills to care for
the dogs and is desperately trying to find someone
to adopt them before the place is sold.
We can keep them there as long as the house is
in limbo," said Ecdao, who can't afford to board
Roxy and Bear. "But that's not fair to the dogs.
They're not getting the attention that they
deserve."
Actually, Roxy and Bear are among the luckier
four-legged victims of the housing crisis. As more
and more Californians are turned out of their
homes by foreclosures or forced sales, family pets
-- especially dogs and cats -- are being left
behind to fend for themselves.
"These people don't know what's going to happen to
them, and they figure someone will take care of
the cat," said Jacky deHaviland, who works with a
Los Angeles-area group called Muttshack Animal
Rescue. "They say 'I can't even deal with this.
How can I deal with that?' "
For DiAnna Pfaff-Martin of Newport Beach, founder
of the Animal Network of Orange County, the
wake-up call came last week when she got five new
adoption cases -- four dogs and a cat -- because
their owners had lost their homes.
"This is the first time I've had this kind of
problem since I started doing this in 1996,"
Pfaff-Martin said.
As the housing crunch worsens -- foreclosures in
California are at record levels -- so will the
problem of homeless pets, she said. "I think this
is just the tip of the iceberg."
Real estate pros and other animal welfare
organizations are reporting similar trends.
"I'm getting calls from desperate people who are
losing their homes, asking us to rescue their
cat," said Fran Moore of Irvine, a co-founder of
the Orange County Animal Rescue Coalition, which
works with the public shelter in Corona, an area
hit hard by foreclosures.
Leo Nordine, a Hermosa Beach broker who
specializes in selling repossessed homes, said he
finds abandoned dogs at least once a month these
days. Sometimes they're chained in a yard,
sometimes locked in the house. They're often
emaciated, if they're alive at all.
Nordine first tries to get neighbors to take in an
abandoned dog. If that fails, he calls a public
shelter or a private group to pick up the animal.
(Going to the county pound is often a death
sentence, especially for large dogs, which are
difficult to place. In Orange County, for example,
40% of the almost 28,000 dogs and cats impounded
by the county last year were destroyed.)
In Corona, shelter manager Darryl Heppner has seen
a 16% jump in the number of animals brought in
during the last six months.