Sources & Methodology

Sources & Methodology

The Six-Tier Source Hierarchy Behind Every Page

animal-shelter.org/ content is drawn from a strict hierarchy of authoritative U.S. animal-welfare sources. This page documents the municipal agencies, professional bodies, national non-profits, federal regulators, state-law framework, and adoption platforms we rely on โ€” and the sources we deliberately avoid.

Last reviewed: April 2026
Review cycle: Quarterly
Verification rule: Live-portal check + dial-test before publication

1. The Hierarchy at a Glance

Every page on animal-shelter.org/ is built from sources at the highest possible tier. Where Tier 1 (the local animal services agency or shelter itself) is available, we use it. Where Tier 1 doesn't publish what's needed, we work down. We never invert the hierarchy.

TierWhat it isUsed for
1Municipal animal services, county shelters, humane societies, SPCAs, breed/species rescuesPhone numbers, addresses, hours, intake/adoption fees, current director, after-hours protocol
2Professional bodies โ€” NACA, SAWA, AVMA, AAHACross-jurisdictional standards, training credentials, professional referrals
3National non-profits โ€” ASPCA, Humane World for Animals (HSUS), Best Friends, American HumaneNational data (Shelter Animals Count), Pets for Life, disaster response, large-scale cruelty
4Federal โ€” USDA APHIS Animal Care, CDC, FTC, FBIAnimal Welfare Act, rabies/zoonotic disease, advertising standards, animal-fighting enforcement
5State โ€” cruelty statutes, rabies laws, stray-hold periods, dangerous-dog laws, BSL, state ag/public-healthState-specific procedures and legal framework
6Reputable animal-welfare press; Animal Legal Defense Fund publications; peer-reviewed researchBackground context only โ€” never the sole source for a current portal URL or procedure

2. Tier 1 โ€” Municipal Animal Services and Local Shelters

The municipal animal services agency is almost always our primary source. Each U.S. county and major city has one โ€” sometimes a standalone department, sometimes within the police department, sometimes within environmental services or public health. Naming varies: “Animal Services,” “Animal Control,” “Animal Care & Control,” “Animal Regulation.” We use the official agency name as published.

Verified contacts only โ€” no Google-search fallbacks

Every Tier 1 phone number on this site is dial-tested or verified against the agency’s published contact page before publication, and re-verified on a quarterly cycle. We do not insert “Google search for [agency name]” URLs as fallbacks. If we cannot verify a working contact, the page either omits the link or is held until verification is complete.

3. Tier 2 โ€” Professional Bodies

BodyRoleURL
National Animal Control Association (NACA)Professional association for animal control officers; training and certification; standards for animal control operationsnacanet.org
Society of Animal Welfare Administrators (SAWA)Professional association for sheltering executives; the Animal Welfare Administrator credentialsawanetwork.org
American Veterinary Medical Association (AVMA)National veterinary professional body; AVMA shelter veterinary medicine guidance; positions on euthanasia, BSL, spay/neuteravma.org
American Animal Hospital Association (AAHA)Veterinary practice accreditation; operates AAHA Universal Pet Microchip Lookupaaha.org
Association of Shelter Veterinarians (ASV)Specialty professional body for shelter medicine; published the Guidelines for Standards of Care in Animal Shelterssheltervet.org

4. Tier 3 โ€” National Non-Profits

OrganizationRoleURL
ASPCA โ€” American Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to AnimalsLargest U.S. animal-welfare non-profit; Animal Poison Control Center 1-888-426-4435; Shelter Animals Count parent program; ASPCApro shelter resourcesaspca.org
Humane World for Animals (formerly HSUS โ€” Humane Society of the United States)National advocacy and policy; Animal Rescue Team for large-scale cruelty cases; Pets for Life community programme; HumanePro for sheltering professionalshumaneworld.org ยท humanepro.org
Best Friends Animal SocietyNational no-kill movement; Best Friends Network of partner shelters; sanctuary in Kanab, Utah; Save Them All campaignbestfriends.org
American Humane (American Humane Association)National animal welfare; “No Animals Were Harmed” film certification; American Humane Certified farm welfare; First to Serve disaster responseamericanhumane.org
Shelter Animals CountNational database for animal sheltering statistics โ€” operated as a programme of the ASPCA; 2025 Annual Report shows ~5.8 million dog/cat community intakesshelteranimalscount.org
Animal Legal Defense Fund (ALDF)Animal-law non-profit; annual state cruelty-law rankings; pet-protection-order advocacyaldf.org
National Council on Pet Population (NCPP)Multi-stakeholder coalition for sheltering data; founding members include AAHA, AVMA, ASPCA, HSUS, MSPCA, NACACoalition organisation
Maddie’s FundNational foundation funding shelter-medicine education and lifesaving programmesmaddiesfund.org
Petfinder FoundationAffiliated with Petfinder; grants for shelters and rescues; Rehome program for owner-to-adopter rehomingpetfinderfoundation.com

5. Tier 4 โ€” Federal Agencies and Frameworks

AgencyRoleURL
USDA APHIS Animal CareFederal regulator under the Animal Welfare Act; licenses dealers, exhibitors, research, and transport; AWA inspection reportsaphis.usda.gov/animal-welfare
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC)Rabies framework; zoonotic-disease guidance; pet importation rules; bat-rabies guidancecdc.gov/rabies
FBI โ€” Animal Cruelty / Animal FightingAnimal cruelty has been a separate NIBRS Group A offence since 2016; animal fighting is a federal felony under 7 U.S.C. ยง 2156; tip line 1-800-CALL-FBItips.fbi.gov
FTC โ€” Federal Trade CommissionEndorsement disclosure rules at 16 C.F.R. Part 255; consumer-protection enforcementftc.gov
FDA โ€” Center for Veterinary MedicinePet food, pet medications, and animal-drug regulationfda.gov/animal-veterinary
U.S. Fish & Wildlife ServiceMigratory Bird Treaty Act enforcement; endangered species; wildlife import/exportfws.gov
U.S. Department of Justice โ€” Civil Rights DivisionADA service-animal enforcement under 28 C.F.R. ยง 36.302ada.gov
HUD Office of Fair HousingEmotional Support Animal accommodations under the Fair Housing Acthud.gov/fair-housing

6. Tier 5 โ€” State Law Framework

Animal welfare in the U.S. is heavily state-and-local. We track state-by-state for these key concepts:

  • Cruelty statutes โ€” every state has one; ALDF’s annual state rankings track relative strength
  • Felony cruelty โ€” present in every state since 2014 (South Dakota was the last to enact)
  • Rabies-vaccination requirements โ€” most states mandate; species and timing vary
  • Quarantine periods after a bite โ€” 10 days in most states (CDC framework)
  • Stray-hold periods โ€” typically 3-7 days before unclaimed animals become shelter property
  • Dangerous-dog statutes โ€” many states have a three-tier classification
  • Breed-specific legislation (BSL) โ€” present in 700+ U.S. cities/counties; Maryland is the only state with a state-level pit-bull-specific statute (modified by 2014 legislation)
  • Hot-car / right-to-rescue statutes โ€” about 16 states
  • Pet-protection-order statutes โ€” many states allow pets to be included in domestic-violence protective orders
  • Service-animal misrepresentation laws โ€” many states criminalise misrepresenting an untrained pet as a service animal
  • State department of agriculture / livestock board โ€” handles farm-animal welfare
  • State public-health department โ€” administers rabies framework

7. Tier 6 โ€” Reputable Animal-Welfare Press and Research

  • Animal Sheltering Magazine (HumanePro)
  • The Veterinary Information Network (VIN) shelter-medicine resources
  • Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association (JAVMA)
  • Journal of Applied Animal Welfare Science
  • Animals (MDPI peer-reviewed journal)
  • National investigative journalism on puppy mills, hoarding, animal fighting (e.g., HSUS undercover investigations as covered by reputable mainstream press)
  • Used for background only โ€” never as the sole source for a current contact or procedure

8. Microchip Registries

Microchip registration in the U.S. is fragmented across many private registries. Federation through AAHA Universal Pet Microchip Lookup is essential for lost-pet recovery.

RegistryURL
AAHA Universal Pet Microchip Lookup (federated lookup)petmicrochiplookup.org
24PetWatch24petwatch.com
HomeAgainhomeagain.com
AKC Reuniteakcreunite.org
Found Animals (Michelson Found Animals Registry)foundanimals.org
PetLinkpetlink.net

9. Adoption Platforms

PlatformWhat it isURL
PetfinderLargest U.S. shelter-and-rescue listing platform; owned by Purina; used by most U.S. shelterspetfinder.com
Adopt-a-PetMajor listing platform; runs the Rehome owner-to-adopter programadoptapet.com
Rescue MeBreed-specific rescue networkrescueme.org
PawboostLost & Found pet alertspawboost.com

10. Federal Laws โ€” Quick-Reference Table

Statute / RuleCitation
Animal Welfare Act7 U.S.C. ยง 2131 et seq.
Animal fighting prohibition7 U.S.C. ยง 2156 (federal felony)
Migratory Bird Treaty Act16 U.S.C. ยงยง 703โ€“712
ADA service animals28 C.F.R. ยง 36.302
Fair Housing Act ESA42 U.S.C. ยง 3604
COPPA15 U.S.C. ยงยง6501โ€“6506; 16 C.F.R. Part 312
FTC Endorsement Guides16 C.F.R. Part 255
DMCA hosting safe harbour17 U.S.C. ยง 512
Computer Fraud and Abuse Act18 U.S.C. ยง 1030
PETS Act (disaster response)Pets Evacuation and Transportation Standards Act of 2006, Pub. L. 109-308

11. State Law Concepts โ€” How We Cover Them

Each state’s framework is distinct. Per-state pages document:

  • The cruelty statute, with felony tier where applicable
  • The rabies-vaccination law and quarantine framework
  • The stray-hold period
  • The dangerous-dog framework
  • BSL where in force (state, county, or city level)
  • Pet-protection-order availability in DV cases
  • Hot-car / right-to-rescue status
  • Service-animal misrepresentation framework
  • The state department of agriculture or veterinary medical board
  • The state attorney general’s charity bureau (for non-profit oversight)

12. Sources We Deliberately Avoid

  • Breeders, puppy mills, and “designer dog” outlets โ€” counter to our editorial position on adopt-don’t-shop
  • Online pet-classifieds without welfare standards โ€” venues that have facilitated puppy-mill sales and pet-resale fraud
  • Ear-cropping, tail-docking, and devocalisation services โ€” practices the AVMA and most state veterinary boards advise against for cosmetic reasons
  • Dog-fighting paraphernalia retailers
  • Aggregator sites without primary-source attribution โ€” if we cannot trace a contact back to the agency’s own page or a verified call, we don’t publish it
  • Anonymous tips and crowdsourced submissions as primary source โ€” animal-shelter.org/ content is editorial
  • Outdated agency pages โ€” when an agency redesigns its waste portal, we update; the old URL doesn’t survive on our pages
  • Marketing material from veterinary chains as a substitute for AVMA / state-board guidance

13. The Verification Workflow

Every page is built through the same workflow:

  • Identify the relevant municipal animal services agency
  • Locate the official .gov page and confirm it loads
  • Capture and dial-test the main phone number
  • Verify the address against the agency’s contact page and USPS ZIP+4
  • Document hours and after-hours protocol
  • Cross-reference Tier 2-4 references against each body’s own page
  • Cross-reference state law for cruelty / rabies / stray-hold / BSL
  • Editor sign-off โ€” second editor reviews end-to-end including the emergency-routing block
  • Quarterly re-verification โ€” every external link is tested and every shelter contact is checked
  • Expedited 48-hour path for reader-reported broken contacts

14. Source-Driven Corrections

If you spot a source error โ€” a phone number that no longer reaches the agency, an address that’s no longer current, an outdated statute citation โ€” please tell us. Source corrections are our highest-priority queue. Email info@animal-shelter.org with subject “Source correction” and include the page URL, the statement you believe is wrong, and the authoritative source supporting the correction.

Source-First, Always

The municipal animal services agency or operating shelter is the source of truth. The professional bodies and national non-profits are the second layer. Federal and state law is the framework. Everything else is context.

๐Ÿ“‹ Editorial Policy ๐Ÿ“ง Source correction