Cy-Fair - Jersey Village Edition | February 2026

Harris County combats animal overpopulation From the cover

What’s happening

Harris County Pets service requests Harris County Pets service requests received by ZIP code

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On Nov. 1 2024, Harris County o cials approved a policy that halved the amount of time—from 30 to 15 days—a pet can stay in the animal shelter before being considered for euthanasia. Corey Steele, director of veterinary public health at Harris County Public Health, said euthanizations increased by 1,355 from November 2024 to October 2025. Euthanasia is the last resort for animals within its custody, according to HCP. However, it is an essential component of its operation to ensure the health and safety of other pets in the shelter and residents in the community. “We focused on the 15 days speci„cally because, as a municipal animal shelter, we get animals of all kinds ... but we do obviously have a ton of good adoptable pets,” Steele said.

More than 831 556-831 283-555 77-282 1-76 No data

290

610

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SOURCE: HARRIS COUNTY PETS COMMUNITY IMPACT

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How we got here

The Impact

Sarah Mills, senior director of operations at PetSet, said when it comes to animals in shelters, there are limited options. “There are very di’cult decisions that have to be made, but the reality is not every dog is adoptable,” Mills said. Steele said in November, HCP saw a 175-adoption increase and a higher intake. Yet, an uptick of adoptions doesn’t translate to a higher overall live release rate. Live Release Rate refers to the percentage of animals that are adopted or rescued. Big Love Rescue board member Tonya Mathews said the policy change limited the time rescues have to assist pets. “It truly takes a village to save these animals,” Mathews said.

“When we were holding them for 30 days, we saw multiple animals in a kennel, which is not the best environment for them,” Steele said. “And when animals are in a four-by-six kennel with other animals for months at a time, it’s not good for them either, and so we needed to gure out a way to help move animals to the shelter quicker and decrease that length of stay.” In addition, Steele said that with a high popula- tion of animals also comes an increase in disease transmission among animals. “Even with vaccinations and boosters that we do when they rst come in and throughout their stay, we still see a high disease transmission,” Steele said.

Steele said before its updated euthanasia policy, the shelter was consistently at least 175% over capacity—with over 30,000 animal control calls received a year. “Our intake dropped signicantly, the amount of animals that we can pick up. … Those decrease just because of the space. So we saw a very high population here, but a lesser intake of animals,” Steele said. After seeing consistent upward trends in animal population, Steele said HCP sent out a survey to over 1,000 animal networks and animal welfare organizations to get their input on the issue. With animal welfare in mind and the surveys sent out, Steele said HCP made the decision to update its policy.

Harris County Pets shelter population

Cats

Dogs

2024

2025

Capacity

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2025

Capacity

“The one thing I want to say is stop bashing the shelters. The shelters are a direct result of our failures as a community. So we as a community need to take responsibility

500 400

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Capacity 2024-25: 225

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for this overpopulation crisis. The shelters are just the end result.” SARAH MILLS, SENIOR DIRECTOR OF OPERATIONS AT PETSET

200

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Capacity 2024: 240 | 2025: 243

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SOURCE: HARRIS COUNTY PUBLIC HEALTH VETERINARY PUBLIC HEALTH DIVISION DATA HUB COMMUNITY IMPACT

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COMMUNITYIMPACT.COM

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