“Several dogs of different sizes and colors standing behind metal bars in an animal shelter kennel. Some dogs are looking forward while others appear to be barking or howling. The setting is indoors with tiled walls and bedding on the floor.”

Across Los Angeles, overcrowded shelters are running out of time and space. For Oso, a Belgian Malinois mix, that time came down to just eleven minutes at the Downey Animal Shelter before help arrived from a rescue team in Santa Clarita.

“It was down to minutes left before he was going to get euthanized,” said Matt Even, a member of Ollie’s Angels rescue team.

“They wouldn’t let me see him. They said he was too aggressive. I wasn’t even allowed to touch him,” said Evan.

But rescuers say Oso wasn’t aggressive. He was terrified.

When Tara Bennett from Ollie’s Angels Rescue learned that his time was almost up, she raced to send an email that could save his life.

“When I found out that the deadline was 2 p.m., and at this point it was already 1:50 p.m., my gut was doing somersaults. My hands were shaking when I hit send at 1:57 p.m.” said Bennett.

An email that saved Oso’s life, one of the few happy endings in a growing crisis.

Across Los Angeles city shelters, more than 1,200 dogs were euthanized in 2024, a 72% increase from the previous year, according to The Los Angeles Times.

Rescue groups say that owners are surrendering, and rising costs are pushing shelters past their capacity.

“We’ve come to the realization we’re not going to adopt our way out of the crisis,” said Bennett.

“We’re seeing more euthanasia across the board, whether it’s in city shelters, county shelters.”

“Every dog we get adopted is wonderful, but three more keep coming in,” Bennett said. “Educating people to the reality of what happens if you do surrender your animal and the likelihood that they might not make it out can change a lot of people’s minds.”

The growing shelter crisis reveals both the strain on a system at its limit and the people still fighting to give every animal a chance.

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