Originally Posted by
rpcrowe
I would say that right off the bat, at least 50% of our applicants are denied for one reason or another. We have the advantage that most of our dogs are quite desirable (at least after we get through caring for them). Things would be different if we were working with pit-bulls. Although many pits and pit-mixes are very nice dogs, they are hard to adopt in our area....
We don't generally adopt to families with very young kids because a large number of our rescue dogs have been given up due to their interaction with kids. I will admit that it is often the fault of the kids and the way that the parents teach the kids to interact with animals.
We don't adopt to persons who say that they will sleep the dog in the garage or laundry room.
We hesitate to adopt to very young people because their lives are not settled and the dogs often lose out when the lifestyle changes.
We don't adopt puppies or very young dogs to very old people. We require that old people have a back-up caretaker who would fill-in if the original adopter is no longer able to care for the animal. Many of our dogs arrive because the owner was no longer able to care for them.
Then, we sometimes refuse adoptions for gut-feelings when we see the interaction between the prospector adopter and the dogs.
We do a home inspection to ensure that the house is safe for the dog - no holes in the fence, etc...
My wife will often tell people who get miffed when we don't approve and adoption that we are advocates for the dogs and not in business to make people happy.
One of our previous adopters mentioned that it was easier to adopt their children from China than to get one of our dogs.