Adopting a rescue dog? Here’s what to know about pet insurance

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By Sarah Schlichter | NerdWallet

Adopting a rescue or shelter dog doesn’t just give a needy animal a home. It can provide a playmate for your kids, a jogging buddy for you and a loyal companion for everyone to cuddle with on the couch. But a new pet can also come with unexpected vet bills, which is why you might want to consider pet insurance.

Pet insurance policies can help pay for treatment if your furry friend gets sick or hurt. In some cases, they may also cover vaccinations and other routine care. Here’s how to decide whether pet insurance is right for your rescue dog.

Estimate the cost of vet care

It’s impossible to know which medical problems a given pet may have in the future. However, researching the breeds you’re interested in can help you get a sense of which health conditions are most likely to crop up, says Dr. Antonio DeMarco, chief medical officer at GoodVets, a chain of animal hospitals with locations across the U.S. Some of these conditions can be both serious and expensive to treat, he says.

For example, large-breed dogs like golden and Labrador retrievers are prone to hip dysplasia, a deformity of the hip joint. Some dogs may need surgery to treat it, costing thousands of dollars.

A local vet can advise you on potential health concerns and how much it might cost to manage them. They can also help you estimate the price of routine care.

Understand pet insurance

Pet insurance likely won’t reimburse every dollar you spend at the vet. For example, most plans won’t cover pre-existing conditions that your dog had before you bought the policy. So if you adopt a senior dog with diabetes, you’ll need to pay for the treatment yourself.

For the same reason, you can’t simply wait to get a policy until your vet diagnoses an injury or illness. DeMarco has had pet owners ask him if they can buy insurance after their dog tears an ACL. “[You] sure can, but this isn’t covered,” he tells them.

Most pet insurance plans pay to treat illnesses and injuries but won’t help with routine care unless you buy extra coverage. That coverage may be worth adding for certain dogs, says Maureen Sosa, director of pet support at the Humane Rescue Alliance in Washington, D.C. Smaller dogs are more prone to dental disease and benefit from regular cleanings, which wellness plans can help pay for.

When shopping for pet insurance, check for deductibles and copays. Say your plan will pay 80% of your expenses after you’ve met the $500 annual deductible. That means you’d have to spend $500 on your pet’s treatment in a given year before your plan would start reimbursing you.

Your policy may also have a maximum payout limit, such as $5,000 or $10,000 per year.

Get pet insurance quotes

The average cost of accident and illness coverage for a dog is about $640 per year, according to the North American Pet Health Insurance Association. However, you might pay more or less depending on where you live, the coverage options you choose and the breed and age of your dog.

You can get online quotes from most pet insurance providers. Check rates from at least three companies to make sure you’re getting the best price for the coverage you want.

Pet insurance isn’t worth the cost for every rescue dog. Policies may be prohibitively expensive for older dogs, especially if they already have chronic conditions that the policy won’t cover. In these cases, you may be better off skipping insurance and setting up an emergency fund for vet expenses.

Consider your peace of mind

One of the biggest benefits of pet insurance is avoiding heart-breaking financial decisions. Sosa has seen owners forced to surrender pets because they couldn’t afford to treat their medical conditions. “The economy is in a really bad place,” she says. “That’s trickling down and affecting what people are able to afford.”

Even worse, some owners may have to euthanize their dogs if the treatment for a serious condition is simply too expensive, DeMarco says. “As veterinarians, that is the worst-case scenario for us.”

You may go years without having to use your pet insurance. But in a crisis, having the policy can give you peace of mind, DeMarco says. You’ll know that “if those situations arise, you’re going to be able to handle them financially and not have to make decisions based on finances rather than what’s best for your animal.”

This article was written by NerdWallet and was originally published by The Associated Press.

 

Sarah Schlichter writes for NerdWallet. Email: sschlichter@nerdwallet.com.

Who is Maine mass shooting suspect Robert Card?

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Authorities have named Robert Card, a 40-year-old firearms instructor in the Army Reserve, as the suspect in a mass shooting that killed 18 people in Lewiston, Maine, on Wednesday night.

Here’s what we know about the Card so far.

Card is still at large and named in an arrest warrant on eight counts of murder, Maine State Police Colonel William Ross said at a press conference Thursday morning. The counts are expected to rise to 18 as remaining victims are identified, Ross said.

In the press conference, Maine Gov. Janet Mills stated Card is still considered armed and dangerous and residents “should not approach him under any circumstances.”

Officials said Thursday they would not yet speak to Card’s possible motives, including his mental health history.

However, a police bulletin circulated by law enforcement Wednesday night and reported by the AP noted Card had been committed to a mental health facility for two weeks in the summer of 2023.

The bulletin said Card had reported “hearing voices and threats to shoot up” the military base, according to the AP, but did not provide details regarding his treatment or diagnosis.

The bulletin also reportedly stated Card worked as a firearms instructor and is a member of the Army Reserve assigned to a training facility in Saco, Maine.

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“Sgt. 1st Class Robert R. Card II is a Petroleum Supply Specialist in the Army Reserve, enlisting in December 2002,” said Army spokesperson Bryce Dubee. “He has no combat deployments.”

Card was awarded with the Army Achievement Medal, Army Reserve Component Achievement Medal x2, Humanitarian Service Medal, National Defense Service Medal and Army Service Ribbon, Dubee stated.

Card attended the University of Maine from 2001-2004, according to university spokesperson Eric Gordon, but did not complete his degree studies or graduate. He was a Engineering Technology major.

Card was last seen in a brown shirt and blue pants, according to police. Police issued a shelter-in-place advisory for Androscoggin County and Bowdoin in Sagadahoc County.

Gavin Newsom slams Maine Republicans over gun control after mass shooting

posted in: Politics | 0

California Gov. Gavin Newsom slammed Maine Republicans on social media for rejecting a gun control bill that would have required a 72-hour waiting period for firearm purchases earlier this year after a gunman opened fire and killed at least 18 people in Lewiston Wednesday night.

Newsom pointed the finger at Republicans, but Democrats have control of both Maine’s House and Senate. The June legislation’s rejection was bipartisan, failing in the House 73-69 with 65 Republicans and seven Democrats voting against and in the Senate 24-11 with all 13 Republicans and 11 Democrats voting against.

Democratic Maine Gov. Janet Mills had remained largely silent on the proposal. At a press conference Thursday, Mills condemned the shootings without mentioning gun control.

“They seriously could not fathom waiting 72 hours to buy a gun,” Newsom wrote on X, formerly known as Twitter, in a post that also criticized Maine’s lack of laws to ban assault weapons, require permits to carry a gun in public or require background checks on all gun sales.

The California governor also repeated his calls for further gun control action from Congress. He has been vocal about calling out Republicans for not passing gun safety legislation, particularly after two mass shootings in his state left 19 people dead earlier this year.

On Wednesday night, a man shot and killed at least 18 people and injured at least 13 at a restaurant and a bowling alley in Lewiston, Maine, and then fled the scene. Law enforcement continued to search for the suspect, identified as Robert Card, on Thursday.

Card was described as a firearms instructor believed to be in the Army Reserve and assigned to a training facility in Saco, Maine, according to the Associated Press.

Here’s how Gophers football can win the Big Ten West

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The Gophers’ 12-10 win over Iowa last week has rejuvenated Minnesota’s outlook to contend for the Big Ten West Division title.

With five games remaining, Minnesota is 2-2 in the Big Ten and enters Saturday’s home game as a seven-point favorite against Michigan State (0-4).

In the West standings, the third-place Gophers sit one game behind Wisconsin (3-1) and a half-game behind Iowa (3-2). But Minnesota holds the head-to-head tiebreaker with the Hawkeyes and fourth-place Nebraska (2-2).

This current situation sets up a plausible scenario for the Battle for Paul Bunyan’s Axe on Nov. 25 to decide the winner of the West.

Here’s how that might shake out:

Wisconsin is a 14-point home underdog against No. 3 Ohio State (4-0) on Saturday, and Minnesota will be a big underdog when the Gophers play the Buckeyes at Ohio Stadium on Nov. 18. It’s not going out on a limb to assume Ohio State wins both games.

Let’s also predict the Badgers and Gophers win every other game on their schedules — all of which are against teams below them in the standings.

In that world, Wisconsin will be 6-2 and Minnesota will be 5-3 in conference play when they kick off at Huntington Bank Stadium two days after Thanksgiving.

For that rivalry game to be about more than the Axe, the Hawkeyes would need to provide a path.

Let’s project Iowa beats the three foes below them in the West standings but get tripped up at home by resurgent Rutgers (3-2). If the Scarlet Knights beat the Hawkeyes, Iowa would finish 6-3.

In this hypothetical, a Minnesota win over Wisconsin would put the Gophers in the Big Ten Championship Game.

With a Gophers’ win of the Axe, Minnesota, Iowa and Wisconsin would have identical 6-3 conference records, and the Gophers would hold the three-team tiebreaker over their border rivals: winning percentage in games between the tied teams.

But a Badgers win of the Axe in this scenario would push them to the Big Ten title game in Indianapolis.

The likely reality, however, figures to be messier than that.

No team in the West looks like a powerhouse. For instance, Wisconsin needed to score 18 unanswered points for a 25-21 comeback win over Illinois (1-4) last weekend. And Iowa’s offense has not been able to move the ball in any game.

The Gophers will need to iron out their own inconsistencies; that was most glaring in how they coughed up a 21-point lead and lost 38-35 in overtime at Northwestern (1-3) in late September. Without that upset loss, Minnesota would clearly be in a much more advantageous spot within the division.

While the Pioneer Press opted to look at a straight-forward scenario for the stretch run, the Sickos Committee, a group of diehard college football fans, says it has found the opposite — complete chaos.

On social media this week, the group shared a way the division can reach a seven-way tie, with each program finishing 4-5 in the conference and 3-3 in the West. Parsing out how that one is reached and who wins the division is a murky ordeal.

Gophers’ manifest destiny?

Here’s a straight-forward — if certainly not easy — way Minnesota can win the Big Ten West Division:

1 — Wisconsin (3-1 in Big Ten)

No. 3 Ohio State (loss); at Indiana (win); Northwestern (win); Nebraska (win); at Minnesota (loss)

2 — Iowa (3-2)

bye; Northwestern at Wrigley Field (win); Rutgers (loss); Illinois (win); at Nebraska (win)

3 — Minnesota (2-2)

Michigan State (win); Illinois (win); at Purdue (win); at No. 3 Ohio State (loss); Wisconsin (win)

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