Rescue group
A rescue group or rescue organization takes unwanted and/or abused
pets and attempts to find suitable new homes for them. Most rescue
groups are created by and run by volunteers, who take the animals
into their homes and care for them—including training, playing,
handling medical issues, and solving behavior problems—until
a suitable permanent home can be found.
Rescue groups exist for most types of pet—for example, rabbit
rescue or bird rescue, but are most common for dogs and cats.
For animals with many breed types, many rescue groups specialize
in specific breeds or groups of breeds. For example, for dogs,
there might be local Golden Retriever rescue groups, hunting dog
rescue groups, large-dog rescue groups, as well as all-breed dog
rescue groups.
Animal shelters often work closely with rescue groups, because shelters who have difficulty placing otherwise healthy and pet-worth animals would usually rather have the animal placed in a home than euthanized; while the shelters might run out of room, rescue groups can often find more volunteers with space in their homes for temporary placement.
In the UK, both shelter and rescue organisations
are described using the blanket term 'rescue', whether they have
their own premises, buy in accommodation from commercial kennels,
or operate a network of foster homes, where volunteers keep the
animals in their homes until adoption.
Kennels that have a council contract to take in stray dogs are
usually referred to as dog pounds. Some dog pounds also carry
out rescue and rehoming work and are effectively rescue groups
that operate a pound service. Some rescue groups work with pounds
to move dogs to rescues. By law, a dog handed in as a stray to
a UK pound must be held for 7 days before it can be rehomed or
euthanized.
• A municipal shelter is a facility that houses stray and abandoned animals, as well as animals that people can no longer care for, on behalf of local governments
• A no-kill shelter, which is usually a privately-operated organization with a physical location, such as a storefront or free-standing building. Their policies include the specification that no healthy, pet-worthy animal be euthanized
• Not-for-profit rescue organizations that typically operate through a network of volunteer foster homes. These rescue organizations are also committed to a no-kill policy as specified above.

