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More than 1,100 Bay Area Animals Find Their Forever Homes

Since this year’s event was launched on July 28, more than 42,000 pets have already been taken

More than 1,100 pets were adopted in the Bay Area on the fourth annual Clear the Shelters event Saturday. Most participating locations, from San Francisco to Berkeley, reduced or waved their adoption fees. Ian Cull reports.

Cats, dogs, rabbits and other animals, young and old, are waiting to be adopted into forever homes in the Bay Area on Saturday as a part of NBC Bay Area's #ClearTheShelters adoption initiative.

Holly, a sweet canine who was born on the streets of Puerto Rico, was sent to Miami to be adopted but due to the devastating Hurricane Irma, she had to move again. She was flown to Berkeley where she would eventually meet a couple who took her into their home.

"If I can give a shelter animal a good home, whether they're traumatized or not, I'm doing what I should be doing," said Holly's new family, Erik Hesse, a UC Berkeley professor.

Laura Garcia/NBC Bay Area
This little guy, Foo Foo, was waiting to be adopted in Berkeley on Saturday, Aug. 18, 2018.
@spizzy / @marc3y_
Kids have fun at the NBC Bay Area #ClearTheShelters photo booth in Berkeley on Saturday, Aug. 18, 2018.
David Gonzalez/NBC Bay Area
David Gonza, a dog named after Telemundo 48's reporter David Gonzalez, was adopted on Saturday, Aug. 18, 2018.
LauraGarcia/NBC Bay Area
That's one cool dog! This canine is sporting an NBC Bay Area #ClearTheShelters bandanna in Berkeley on Saturday, Aug. 18, 2018.
Courtesy Karim Bouchetata
San Jose Animal Care has a long list of animals that are looking for a new family on Saturday, Aug. 18, 2018.
Courtesy Karim Bouchetata
Adopt MEOW! San Jose Animal Care has a long list of cats that are looking for a new family on Saturday, Aug. 18, 2018.
Riya Bhattacharjee/NBC Bay Area
A small doggie is waiting to be adopted in Berkeley.
Redferns
A couple from Vallejo traveled to San Francisco to SPCA to adopt Gunner (right) as a brother for Gucci (left).
Gunner is happy to find his forever home with a Vallejo couple.
It's not just dogs and cats! This pigeon was also up for adoption.
NBC Bay Area's meteorologist Jeff Ranieri and anchor Jessica Aguirre were helping out at a shelter on #ClearTheSheltersDay.
NBC10
James the cat had an eye infection was he was younger but he can still see. He was waiting for his FURever home Saturday in Berkeley's #ClearTheShelters event.
KNBC-TV
Darlene is with her puppy Elena at #ClearTheShelters event in Berkeley on Saturday.
Damian, the dog, was named after NBC Bay Area's reporter Damian Trujillo. He has now found a forever home.
The Samuels from Half Moon Bay took home Cooper two years ago and they've come back to take Joe (pictured) home at Saturday's #ClearTheShelters event.
ARF Walnut Creek
ARF Walnut Creek
Jeff Ranieri, the dog, was named after NBC Bay Area's Chief Meteorologist Jeff Ranieri. He has now found a forever home.
ARF Walnut Creek
ARF Walnut Creek

Another dog that was in Berkeley Saturday came from Redding after the area was devastated by the Carr Fire. Maya was adopted at the Berkeley Humane Society along with more than 1,100 other animals all over the Bay Area.

Clear the Shelters, the fourth annual pet adoption drive sponsored by the NBC- and Telemundo-owned television stations, culminates today with more than 1,200 shelters participating in dozens of communities across the country.

Click here for information on the participating locations across the Bay Area.

Since this year’s event was launched on July 28, more than 42,000 pets have already been taken. To encourage families to find a new pet, whether puppies, older cats, rabbits or iguanas, many of the participating animal shelters and rescue organizations are reducing or waiving adoption fees.

The need remains great. The number of animals entering shelters each year is about 6.5 million, 3.3 million dogs and 3.2 million cats, according to the American Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals. Though the number has declined from about 7.2 million in 2011, with the biggest drop in the number dogs, approximately 1.5 million shelter animals are euthanized each year.

On the happier side, about 3.2 million shelter animals are adopted annually and another 710,000 are returned to their owners.

Chelena Goldman
C
PCT 4
AP
Metroplex Sportservice
Associated Press photos
SHUTTERSTOCK
Metroplex Sportservice
Texas Parks and Wildlife / Photo: Amy-Outdoor Lerning Center Coordinator
Metroplex Sportservice
Metroplex Sportservice

Clear the Shelters began in North Texas in 2014 as a partnership among the NBC and Telemundo stations in Dallas-Fort Worth and dozens of North Texas animal shelters. More than 2,200 homeless animals were adopted that first year, the most in a single day in North Texas.

A year later that number jumped to nearly 20,000 as the adoption drive went national, with more than 400 shelters taking part across the country. Last year, as the event was extended over a month, more than 80,000 pets were adopted from over 900 shelters.

So far this year, 76, 348 pets have been adopted nationwide bringing the total number of animals that have been adopted since the campaign began in 2015 to 229,982. 

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