The Louisiana SPCA has abruptly pulled back services at its New Orleans campus after a sharp reduction in city support left the agency with fewer staff and fewer tools to work with. The shelter says it will now focus its response on animal emergencies, abuse and neglect cases, trim public adoption hours to Wednesday through Saturday, and halt intake of horses and other large animals. Its veterinary clinic and pet food pantry are still open, but staff say partner rescues are already feeling the squeeze.
City budget squeeze behind the cutbacks
New Orleans officials approved a $1.6 billion operating budget aimed at closing an estimated $222 million deficit, a move that triggered cuts and reshuffling across nonprofit contracts and grants, according to New Orleans CityBusiness. Local shelters say that belt-tightening is what left the Louisiana SPCA with less municipal backing heading into 2026.
Hours trimmed but core programs stay open
The Louisiana SPCA’s website now lists public intake and adoption hours as Wednesday through Saturday, 10 a.m. to 5 p.m., and notes that its community clinic and pet food pantry remain in operation. The organization says it will keep its open-admission policy for smaller companion animals even as it pauses intake of large animals, a shift it ties directly to staffing and budget limits at the New Orleans campus.
Partner rescues say the strain is already here
Leadership at the LA SPCA and its local partners warn that the reduced services are already rippling through the rescue network. The shelter reports the city’s allocation fell from about $3.5 million in 2025 to roughly $1.3 million for 2026, a drop of roughly 38%, and partner groups say calls that once went to LASPCA are now landing with them. As reported by FOX 8 New Orleans, Humane Society of Louisiana director Jeff Dorson said, “Our phones started to explode,” adding that his group is already beyond capacity while trying to handle the overflow…