Multi-Agency Initiative Will Expand Access to Pet-Friendly Housing, Shelters, and Resources Across New York City
Promoting Pet Inclusivity Across All Housing Sectors
- Partnering with the Michelson Found Animals’ Pet-Inclusive Housing Initiative to encourage pet-inclusive policies among landlords and property managers.
- Educating New Yorkers on tenant legal protections through a detailed Keeping Pets in New York City Housing flyer developed with the Tenant Protection Cabinet.
- Joining with “My Dog Is My Home’s” Co-Sheltering Collaborative to create a New York City working group in October 2025 focused on keeping people and pets together.
These efforts reflect the Adams administration’s broader commitment to fair, inclusive, and compassionate housing policies that recognize the vital role pets play in people’s lives and contributes to making New York City the best place to raise a family.
- Create a resource library on NYCHA’s website to connect residents with animal care resources.
- Provide opportunities for animal care organizations to participate in family day events for resident leaders and residents who express interest.
- Expand staff training to strengthen policy implementation, with a focus on helping residents meet pet care and management (e.g. spay/neuter, leash rules, etc.).
- Conduct a resident survey to collect feedback and guide future improvements to pet policies.
- Families with Children: Expanding the presence of People and Animals Living Safely at DHS through the launch of a new pilot at one of Urban Resource Institute’s Families with Children shelter. The pilot will enable families new to shelter to enter with their pets and will set aside 20 pet-friendly units, supporting up to 30 pets. Notably, this will mark the city's first pilot for families with pets entering the standard shelter intake process through the Prevention Assistance and Temporary Housing family intake c
- Low-Barrier Sites: Through a partnership with Bronx Family Network, six units at one stabilization bed site, The Holly, will be dedicated to unsheltered individuals with pets, offering a low-barrier environment where people can remain with their pets.
- Drop-in Centers: Allowing pets at three drop-in centers across the city during Code Blue emergencies, with an updated policy to be published before year’s end.
- Data and Policy Development: Beginning with the 2026 Spring Quarterly Count, DHS will include pets in quarterly street counts to inform potential inclusion in the 2027 HOPE Count.
- DHS Survey: DHS issued a survey to contracted providers in mid-November to understand the need for additional pet-inclusive shelters and the operational considerations for allowing pets beyond emotional support animals and service animals. Provider responses are due by the end of the year, with findings anticipated in early 2026.
HPD's Emergency Housing Services program provides temporary emergency housing for households displaced by a fire or a city issued vacate order. HPD is conducting a feasibility study to determine whether co-habitation of pets can be integrated into family shelters. Based on the results of that study, HPD’s co-sheltering pilot program will help keep more families experiencing emergencies together with their pets.
- Continue training Safe Horizon Hotline staff and No Violence Again teams to identify and connect survivors with shelters that accept pets or with temporary foster and boarding programs.
- Regularly update resources for shelter providers and partner organizations to improve coordination and safety for survivors and their pets.
Today’s announcement builds on the Adams administration’s broader commitment to increase capacity to better care for the animals in shelter populations. Earlier this year, the Adams administration announced a one million dollar investment in the ACC to improve Manhattan and Queens shelter conditions by supporting the hiring and training of 14 additional staff for those locations. In 2022, the Adams administration opened a new ACC in Staten Island to better serve the needs of sheltered animals on Staten Island. In 2024, the first full-service animal shelter opened in Queens and a new Pet Adoption Center opened in Manhattan. A new Bronx ACC — the first full-service animal shelter for the borough — is expected to open next year, and a fully renovated Brooklyn ACC is also in the works.
“Every day ACC takes in pets that are being surrendered, many because their families can’t find pet-inclusive housing” said Risa Weinstock, president and CEO, Animal Care Centers of New York City. “These are loved animals, family members, being given up not for behavior, not for lack of care, but because their humans are out of options. When we keep people and pets together, we preserve families, reduce intake pressure on shelters, and strengthen the communities we all share. New Yorkers deserve housing policies that reflect what we already know: pets are family.”
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