Bringing a dog into your home means more than providing food and shelter. It is a commitment to love and care for them through every stage of life.
Unfortunately, not every owner lives up to that responsibility. For some dogs, especially those who grow old, abandonment becomes their reality.

No One Came for Her
A kind stranger spotted Molly running through traffic and quickly brought her to Long Beach Animal Care Services. When staff scanned her for a microchip, they were relieved to find one. It felt like a hopeful sign. They contacted the number listed and reached her original owners.

That day came and went. Molly waited. The shelter followed up with phone calls and emails, but no one responded again. After two long weeks, the staff realized the sad truth. No one was coming for Molly.
Gina Castillo, Director of The Forgotten Dog Foundation in Santa Monica, heard about the senior dog who had been abandoned twice.
She knew time was running out and immediately stepped in to help. Gina picked Molly up from the shelter and brought her to the foundation’s sanctuary.

She was partially blind and had a painful ear infection. Her back leg was damaged due to a luxating patella. Her teeth were in terrible shape, and she had an oral fistula—a painful hole caused by an untreated infection in her mouth.

A Safe Place to Call Home
Molly underwent surgery to remove eleven decaying teeth and to repair the fistula. Her medical care cost nearly four thousand dollars, and her kidney-support diet adds about one hundred dollars a month in expenses. But for the first time in a long time, she was healing.

Molly is finally safe. After years of being passed around and forgotten, she now lives each day knowing she is cherished. She will never be left behind again.