LA Dog Dispatch was built by a 20-year tech executive who realized something frustrating:
No matter how many people care, dogs are still dying.
Not because rescues aren't working hard. Not because donors don't care.
The people are there. The money is there. The rescues are there. But the technology connecting them is too slow.
In a world where money moves instantly and information travels in seconds, urgent dogs are still relying on manual posts, comment pledges, and scattered outreach.
The clock moves fast. The technology doesn't.
So we built the technology to connect everyone who wants to help — immediately.
LA Dog Dispatch automatically creates funding pages the moment a dog is euth-listed, activates donors in real time, and gives rescues the confidence to step in fueled by actual dollars instead of uncertainty.
When the system moves faster, more dogs get a real chance.
The system wasn't failing for lack of heart. It was failing for lack of coordination.
Donors pledge in comment threads — but rescues can't act on informal promises. Money that exists never reaches the dog.
Rescues hesitate without confirmed funding. They want to pull — but saying yes without a foster or real dollars is a gamble they can't always take.
Fosters don't know where to plug in. There's no centralized place to say "I'm available" and get connected to a rescue that needs them.
The clock often starts too late. By the time a listing reaches the right people, days of the window are already gone.
We couldn't keep waiting for the government to modernize the system. So we built it.