USC research suggests unhoused people with pets have better shot at finding homes

Recent research by the University of Southern California shows that homeless people with pets get placed into permanent residences more than those without companion animals. The study didn’t focus on why that is, but it’s a finding that sounds promising for those animal lovers looking for shelter.

‘They love you back’

Inside the Bridges on Broadway facility in downtown Eugene, Mary Wragge and her dog, Sadie, got ready for a walk on a warm and sunny morning.

“She sounds a lot more scary than she is,” said Wragge, originally from Sarasota, Florida. She’s had Sadie for 15 months, and has lived at Bridges on Broadway since October. Wragge said she hadn’t really told anyone until she was ready to move in that she had a pet in tow.

Camryn Leland, the permanent supportive housing manager for Homes for Good, met with some of the 60 residents at Bridges on Broadway. It’s her agency’s newest permanent supportive housing development located in the former Red Lion Inn & Suites in downtown Eugene. Many residents have companion animals that were screened for compatibility, health and vaccines to maintain a safe and friendly environment.

When asked about a University of Southern California study that showed unhoused pet owners got placed into permanent housing at roughly twice the rate of those without pets, Leland offered her own explanation…

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