The City of Sacramento’s Front Street Animal Shelter is offering free dog adoptions through Saturday due to kennels reaching “critical capacity.”
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The shelter’s Facebook post announcing the free adoptions read: “At a breaking point.”
The Front Street Animal Shelter is outdated and overcrowded, according to previous Bee reporting.
The shelter opened in 1910 as a “pound” for stray animals. It was expanded in 1992 but still operates within much of the same structure despite a substantial rise in animal intake over the decades.
A 2024 facility assessment found the shelter’s 102 dog kennels and 109 cat spaces meet only about half the current need. Officials said overcrowding increases animal stress, spreads illness and complicates daily care.
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The shelter typically houses 150 to 175 dogs at a time, while hundreds of cats arrive during “kitten season,” also known as feline breeding season, according a 2025 interview with officials. To manage capacity, the shelter also relied on 968 foster volunteers to temporarily house animals.
People interested in adopting a dog during the period when fees are waived can visit dogs at 2127 Front St. from noon-5 p.m. daily. The waitlist for seeing particular dogs opens at 11:30 a.m., according to the city’s website.
The shelter noted in its Facebook post that dogs eligible for free adoption will be spayed/neutered, vaccinated and microchipped.
The shelter’s post encouraged community members who are unable to adopt this week to share information about the event to the others in hopes of finding more dogs.
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This story was originally published May 10, 2026 at 12:26 PM.
