Hi Cindy,
This is a great question! My personal bias is to be very transparent and up-front from the get-go. At our shelter we have several different behavioral disclosures that we can attach to an adoption - they are essentially a waiver the adopter signs at the time of adoption stating we disclosed we were aware of that behavior concern. We have several that are general (resource guarding, dog-dog issues, etc.) and we can also customize them. Below their biography on their kennel card and on the website, we list all the behavioral disclosures that animal has. If the animal has a previous bite history, they get a custom disclosure explaining the circumstances of the bite, and we list "previous bite history" on their list of behavioral disclosures.
We then discuss it during the adoption counsel - what happened, why it happened, how we recommend it be prevented, etc., Then at the time of the adoption they sign the disclosure stating we discussed it with them, and then they also get a copy.
While we don't lead it with - meaning it's not the first thing we discuss or list on the website, we like to be as upfront and transparent as possible so that if a previous bite history is a deal breaker (could be personal preference, renter or home owner's insurance policies, rental rules, etc.) they don't feel swindled by getting attached and then finding out the deal breaker later.
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Erin Wyse
Denver Animal Protection
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Original Message:
Sent: 08-04-2021 05:48 PM
From: Cindy Scherban
Subject: How to rehome a dog with a bite record?
Hello,
I'd love to know what strategies and things to be aware of when rehoming (either for adoption or foster) of a dog with a bite record? Especially if it's one time in specific situations with one person.
I'm looking for general strategies, but if you need any additional specific details, I'm happy to provide as well for a deeper case study.
I'm thinking about what tends to be people's perceptions, and what to include in the initial information, and then how to speak with potential adopters about adopting with that behavior history. I'm looking at navigating being transparent and not downplaying the actual history or risk, but while not broadly demonizing the dog or situation.
Thank you to all in advance for any insight or suggestions.
#AdoptionsandAdoptionPrograms
#Behavior,TrainingandEnrichment
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Cindy Scherban
Spirit Animal Project
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#bitehistory
#Rehoming