Not without my dog

Please support the "Not Without My Dog" initiative by Barking Mad

Not Without My Dog

South Africa is facing an increasing challenge where families are forced to give up their beloved pets due to housing restrictions. Your input will help us advocate for fairer pet-inclusive housing policies and create solutions that keep pets and families together.

This survey will take about 3–5 minutes. All responses are anonymous unless you choose to share your details for updates.

ANIMAL SHELTER STANDARD PROJECT

What Does “Good” Really Mean in Animal Welfare?

In animal welfare, we often hear the phrase: “Not all shelters are good.”

It’s a statement that usually comes from concern for animals, donors, and people who want to help in the right way. But it also raises an important question: what do we actually mean when we say “good”? Because without a shared understanding, “good” can mean very different things to different people.

From the outside, a shelter can look like it’s doing well. The gates open every day. Animals are fed. The team shows up, even when they’re tired. For many shelters, just keeping things going is already a huge achievement. At the same time, when you look a little closer, many shelters are working under enormous pressure with limited resources, small teams, and very little margin for error. They’re doing their best, often quietly and without recognition.

On the other hand, a shelter can be well-funded and well-known and still struggle to achieve the outcomes it hopes for animals. Without clear ways to measure care, well-being, and progress, even good intentions and strong support don’t always translate into the impact we all want to see.

In animal behaviour, we often say: Meet the dog where they are. On a recent Battersea Academy course, I had a lightbulb moment: why don't we meet shelters where they are? That idea is rooted in compassion, realism, and respect. And it applies just as strongly to the people working in animal welfare.

Real change happens when we start from a shelter’s current reality. Minimum standards aren’t about making everyone the same. They’re about creating a shared baseline, a clear, achievable starting point that ensures animals are safe, cared for, and treated with dignity, while recognising the limits and challenges shelters face.

They help answer a simple question:

  • Is the shelter meeting the basic needs of the animals currently in its care?
  • Does the shelter understand what is needed to consistently and appropriately meet those needs?
  • Does the shelter understand the governance and operational structures required to run a shelter effectively and responsibly?

Minimum standards aren’t about judgment or exclusion. They’re about clarity, support, and trust. They give shelters a place to start, donors a clearer understanding of impact, and the sector a shared language for improvement.

Most shelters don’t need criticism; they need encouragement, guidance, and practical support. When we meet people where they are and move forward together, we create a sector that can truly do better for animals, not just in theory, but in everyday reality.

Over the past few months, we have travelled across the country, meeting shelters, listening to their experiences, and gathering invaluable input as we work together to build realistic and achievable minimum standards for animal shelters in South Africa.

We could not make this milestone in animal sheltering in South Africa without the amazing support of Battersea

This article was copied with permission. The project is run by Barking Mad SA and ONE Revolution Foundation.

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