Connect with us

Headlines

COVID-19 Travel Restrictions Leave Many Pets Stranded

Border closures and flight cancellations have left over 1,000 animals stranded around the world.

mm

Published

on

Coronavirus travel restrictions have separated many pets from their owners.

A combination of border closures and flight cancellations have left over 1,000 pets stranded around the world, Reuters reports.

United and other major airlines temporarily stopped their pet programs in March, saying they couldn’t be offered safely or weren’t viable financially during the pandemic. American Airlines and Alaska Airlines continue to fly pets within the U.S. on certain routes.

A few companies, such as IAG Cargo, continue to transport pets internationally, according to Reuters.

Reuters interviewed Frances Hayter and her husband Alan, who worked in Houston and had to leave their cat, Indigo, there when they returned to their home country of Australia. No airline is currently flying pets to Australia.

Indigo is staying with a veterinarian as the couple try to get the cat home. At this point, it appears it will be an expensive and time-consuming process.

Advertisement

Read more at Reuters

Advertisement

FEATURED VIDEO

NASC Media Spotlight

At first it was just an idea: Animal supplements needed the same quality control that human-grade supplements receive. But that was enough to start a movement and an organization —the National Animal Supplement Council — that would be dedicated to establishing a comprehensive path forward for the animal supplements industry. In this Media Spotlight interview, NASC’s president, Bill Bookout, talks to PETS+ interviewer Chloe DiVita about the industry today: Where it’s headed, what’s the latest focus and why it’s vital to gain the involvement of independent pet product retailers.

Promoted Headlines

Most Popular