What the Streets of Tijuana Look Like
Just across the U.S. border, thousands of dogs live and die on the streets of Tijuana with no food, no shelter, and no care.
They search through alleys and empty lots looking for anything to eat. Many were born there. Puppies grow up knowing hunger long before they ever know kindness. Injuries go untreated. Illness spreads. And without intervention, most of these animals live short, painful lives.
Champion Factory Ministry teams saw this firsthand during their regular outreach work in the region. And they made a decision: they would not ignore it.

How the Outreach Began
The animal feeding program did not start with a formal plan. It started with people who noticed a need and showed up.
The ministry's primary work in the area focuses on serving people, specifically children and families facing hardship. But compassion, once it takes root, tends to grow. Teams began bringing food and water for the animals they encountered on their routes. Then they came back. And they kept coming back.
"We were already there serving the community," said one team member. "The dogs were right in front of us. You cannot walk past that kind of suffering and call yourself a ministry of compassion."
That consistent presence turned into a structured outreach effort that now spans both Tijuana and San Diego.
The Numbers Behind the Work
To date, the impact of this outreach is documented and measurable.
- Over 3,500 dogs have been fed through the outreach program
- More than 20,000 bags of dog food have been distributed across Tijuana and San Diego
- 10 dogs have been hospitalized, treated, and given life-saving operations
- Multiple cats have also been hospitalized, operated on, and restored to health
These are not estimates. These are the results of teams showing up, again and again, with resources and a commitment to follow through.

Beyond Food: Medical Care for the Most Vulnerable
Feeding animals keeps them alive. Medical care gives them a chance at a real life.
Some of the animals the team encountered were beyond malnourished. Others had injuries that, without treatment, would have been fatal. The ministry began coordinating veterinary care for the animals in the most critical condition, covering the cost of hospitalization, surgery, and recovery.
"We have seen dogs that could barely stand walk out of a clinic," said outreach coordinator Maria Ruiz. "That does not happen without people who care enough to pay for it and follow through."
Not every story ended well. A few animals were lost despite the team's efforts. But even they were cared for and loved in their final days, which is more than the streets would have given them.
The Parallel That Shapes Everything
The animals on the streets of Tijuana did not choose their circumstances. Neither did the children this ministry serves.
This is the thread that connects the two sides of Champion Factory Ministry's outreach work. Children born into poverty, instability, or abandonment did not choose those conditions. Animals born onto the streets did not choose them either. Both deserve care. Both deserve someone willing to show up.
That shared conviction is what keeps teams coming back, both for the people they serve and for the animals they have come to care for along the way.
What Has Been Accomplished and What Remains
The outreach has already made a measurable difference in hunger and suffering across the areas the ministry serves. The need, though, is still real.
More dogs go without food each day. More animals need medical attention that they will not receive without outside help. The ministry has built the relationships, the supply lines, and the team capacity to do more. What makes the difference is continued support.
Every bag of food purchased funds another day of feeding. Every donation toward veterinary care gives another animal a real chance at survival.
Outcomes at a Glance
- 3,500+ dogs fed through sustained outreach efforts
- 20,000+ bags of dog food distributed across Tijuana and San Diego
- 10 dogs given life-saving hospitalization and surgery
- Multiple cats hospitalized, treated, and restored to health
- Animals recovered from severe malnutrition and critical injuries
- Care and comfort provided to animals lost despite treatment
Be Part of What Comes Next
Champion Factory Ministry believes compassion has no borders. The work in Tijuana proves that one committed team, one bag of food at a time, can change what survival looks like for thousands of living creatures.If you want to support outreach that goes where the need is, regardless of what form that need takes, give today.








