HomeLocal NewsSacramento program gives pets vaccines, microchips and a safer path back home

Sacramento program gives pets vaccines, microchips and a safer path back home

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Sacramento, California – A routine trip for a vaccine can do more than protect a pet from illness. In Sacramento, it can also help keep a dog or cat from ever becoming separated from the family that loves it — or, when separation happens, make the path home much shorter.

That is the purpose behind Front Street Animal Shelter’s free monthly community vaccine clinics, a program offered in partnership with Petco Love. Since the effort began in 2022, the clinics have provided vaccines to 13,679 pets across Sacramento, including 10,781 dogs and 2,898 cats.

The numbers show the reach of a program that operates outside the shelter’s usual intake and adoption work. Month after month, pet owners arrive seeking basic preventive care that may otherwise be difficult to access.

A routine trip for a vaccine can do more than protect a pet from illness. In Sacramento, it can also help keep a dog or cat from ever becoming separated from the family that loves it — or, when separation happens, make the path home much shorter.
Credit: Getty

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Along with free vaccines for dogs and cats, the clinics offer free microchips and first-time pet licenses, giving families additional tools to protect their animals and bring them home quickly if they become lost.

For Front Street, that preventive work is closely tied to its role as Sacramento’s municipal stray-intake shelter. Every pet that remains healthy, identified and connected to an owner has a better chance of staying out of the shelter system altogether.

The clinics are made possible not only through the partnership with Petco Love, but also through the hands-on work of shelter employees and volunteers. Each month, they guide traffic, support pet owners, answer questions and help with the vaccination process as families move through the clinic.

Volunteer Coordinator Abbie Payne said the response from residents has become one of the most meaningful parts of the work.

“It’s amazing to see so many people show up each month to participate in these clinics,” said Payne.

“You can really see how much this community cares about keeping their pets healthy, protected, and safely at home with their families. It’s such a positive thing to be part of.”

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That turnout reflects a simple reality: for many people, pets are not just animals in the home. They are companions, family members and part of everyday life. A vaccine can prevent disease. A microchip can turn a frightening search into a reunion. A first license can help ensure a pet is properly connected to the household it belongs to.

Interim Shelter Manager Ryan Hinderman said the partnership helps Front Street continue offering those services without cost to community pet owners.

“We are so thankful for our partnership with Petco Love, which allows us to continue offering these free monthly clinics for pets in our community,” said Hinderman.

“Increasing the number of owned pets that are microchipped and licensed can help reunite lost animals with their families faster, and hopefully, keep owned pets out of the shelter system.”

As the monthly clinics continue, their impact can be measured in thousands of vaccinated pets — but also in something harder to count: families gaining peace of mind and animals having a stronger chance of remaining safely at home.

Information about upcoming free vaccine and microchip clinics is available through Front Street Animal Shelter’s vaccination resources page.

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