Back to Little Elm

Little Elm Residents Urged to Adopt as North Texas Animal Shelters Exceed Capacity

Fort Worth and Dallas animal shelters are operating well beyond capacity, with hundreds of dogs and cats housed in temporary enclosures, as officials issue an urgent call for adopters and fosters across North Texas.

Tessa Cho

June 28, 20261 min read

Dallas-Fort Worth animal shelters over capacity — illustration, Jake Team LLC
Dallas-Fort Worth animal shelters over capacity — illustration, Jake Team LLC

FORT WORTH, Texas — Animal shelters across Dallas-Fort Worth are in crisis, operating far beyond their intended capacity and housing hundreds of dogs and cats in temporary quarters, prompting an urgent plea for adopters and fosters this week.\n\nFort Worth Animal Care and Control reported its Silcox Animal Campus is at 253% capacity for cats, caring for 165 cats and kittens in a facility designed for approximately 65 standard cat enclosures. A significant portion of the cats are kittens under eight weeks old, housed in temporary accommodations not meant for long-term stays. Dog occupancy at Silcox has reached 137%, with 442 dogs filling all 321 available kennels and many housed in temporary outdoor kennels.\n\nThe Henry's Animal Campus, the city's second facility, is also strained — holding an additional 56 cats and kittens and 250 large-breed dogs. In total, more than 600 dogs and cats are in Fort Worth's care.\n\nDallas Animal Services is similarly overwhelmed. The Dallas shelter has reported operating at 159% capacity for dogs and 102% capacity for cats, recently taking in animals from three large-scale rescues that further strained already-limited space.\n\nOfficials across both cities are asking residents to consider adopting or fostering an animal to help relieve the overcrowding. Fort Worth Animal Care and Control said people who choose to foster will receive food, supplies, and other support from the shelter. Residents interested in helping can visit their local shelter's website for a full list of eligible animals and information on how to adopt or foster.

Little Elm, situated on the south shore of Lewisville Lake about 35 miles north of Dallas, has approximately 55,000 residents and features 23 miles of shoreline along the lake.

Sources

NBC 5 DFW — https://www.nbcdfw.com/news/local/fort-worth-animal-shelters-over-capacity-urgent-call-adopters/4041473/

WFAA — https://www.wfaa.com/article/life/pets/operating-beyond-capacity-fort-worth-animal-shelters-exceed-capacity-city-asks-community-adopt-foster-help-save-life/287-00e40def-513e-45bb-b4da-06867309e0c3

Share

Tessa Cho

Tessa Cho writes about community life, schools, public safety, and local events in Little Elm.

Related Stories