This Isn't a Pet Problem.
It's an Infrastructure Problem.

Right now, somewhere in America: A family is posting flyers for their lost dog.

That exact dog was just brought to a shelter three miles away, but no one knows.

A rescue coordinator is calling fifty foster families one by one, trying to find emergency placement.

Half won't answer.

The animal dies while she's still making calls.



A shelter is at capacity. Twenty miles away, another shelter has empty kennels.

They have no way to know about each other.


A foster family wants to help but doesn't know who to contact.

A volunteer sits idle while transport is desperately needed.

A vet has critical medical records that never reach the new caretaker.


Everyone is trying to save lives.


But everyone is working blind.




We're not losing 3.1 million animals a year because people don't care.


We're losing them because the infrastructure to connect everyone who cares doesn't exist.


Until now.