Prattville-Autauga Humane Society highlights American Bulldog Jordan for adoption
The Prattville-Autauga Humane Society posted a Pet of the Week profile on December 29, 2025, featuring Jordan, an American Bulldog described as very sweet and playful. The weekly profile aimed to raise adoption interest by providing details on temperament, size, and suitability and explained how residents can apply to adopt through the shelter.

On December 29, 2025, the Prattville-Autauga Humane Society (PAHS) published a Pet of the Week profile featuring Jordan, an American Bulldog characterized as very sweet and fond of play. The shelter used its regular weekly post to describe Jordan’s temperament, physical size and the types of owners for whom he would be a good match, and to outline how interested residents can apply for adoption through the shelter’s process.
PAHS’s weekly pet posts are a routine part of the shelter’s outreach strategy, combining individual animal profiles with practical adoption information. Jordan’s entry was dated December 29, 2025, and was listed in the organization’s category of weekly Pet of the Week features. The full animal write-ups are posted on the shelter’s public news feed, where prospective adopters and volunteers can view details about each pet and the steps required to apply.
For Autauga County residents, these profiles serve several functions. They make the adoption pipeline more transparent by communicating an animal’s temperament and needs up front, which helps match animals with households capable of meeting those needs and can reduce returns. They also raise awareness about the day-to-day realities facing the shelter, from the types of animals in care to the behavioral and space considerations that inform adoption recommendations.
The posts carry policy implications for local government and community stakeholders. Regular public communication about available animals highlights the shelter’s operational role and the community resources required to sustain it, including volunteer support, donations and municipal funding. Clear, consistent profiles can help shelter staff manage intake and placement efficiently, but they also underscore the need for ongoing support for animal-control services and humane-shelter capacity as demand fluctuates.
Jordan’s profile is part of a broader civic conversation about animal welfare in Autauga County: how residents adopt responsibly, how volunteer networks and donations bolster shelter operations, and how county policies affect shelter funding and animal-control capacity. Residents interested in adopting, fostering or volunteering are encouraged to contact the Prattville-Autauga Humane Society directly to learn current application procedures, availability and requirements.
The weekly Pet of the Week series, exemplified by Jordan’s December 29 profile, continues to be a practical tool for connecting animals with prospective homes while providing transparency about the shelter’s work and needs. That visibility can influence adoption outcomes, community engagement and the policy discussions that shape local animal welfare services.
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