Tell Lawmakers: Safety Should Include Our Pets

Increases Access to Pet-Friendly Emergency Shelters
 
ASPCA Position: Support

New York has a clear and urgent opportunity to protect survivors and their pets by including $5 million in the 2027 State Budget for a pilot program that enables families to seek emergency shelter with their pets. Because most of New York’s shelters are currently not pet-friendly, too many people in crisis are forced to choose between their safety and their beloved pets who provide essential comfort, love and stability. Urge your state representative to support this funding need.

For many New Yorkers, pets are more than companions — they are lifelines. In moments of crisis, like domestic violence or the loss of housing, giving up a beloved pet can feel more devastating than remaining in a dangerous or unstable situation. For that reason, many people choose to stay, and staying can have life-or-death consequences for them and their pets. Funding a co-housing program would help modernize New York’s shelter system and save lives.

A Proven, Lifesaving Solution: Co-Housing

Co-housing or co-sheltering programs allow people and pets to stay together in emergency housing. These programs can provide safety nets for our community’s most vulnerable populations, and they can save lives. Nearly three-quarters of women in domestic violence shelters report their abuser threatened to harm or kill their pets, so it is unsurprising that 50% of survivors say they would not enter a shelter if they couldn’t bring their pet.

Co-housing can be implemented cost-effectively by retrofitting existing domestic violence and homeless shelters with low-cost fixtures, designated pet spaces or, when possible, shared rooms so pets can live with their people.

California and other states have already demonstrated that this model works. Through the California Pet Assistance and Support Program, the Golden State has awarded $16 million to 243 housing sites, funding on-site pet accommodations, food and supplies, veterinary services and crucial staffing and liability coverage. New York can and should follow suit!

What You Can Do

Stand up for families in crisis: Please use our quick and easy form below to urge your state assemblymember to support the inclusion of $5 million for a co-housing pilot program in New York’s 2027 budget.