First of all, the adoption coordinator will not reply to any emails you send, so don't bother.
Second, be sure to read the contract carefully before you sign. If you sign it you will be signing away your 4th amendment right to freedom from unreasonable search and secure. That part of the contract really has no teeth, but SFTS will believe they have the right to enter your home against your wishes, investigate and confiscate against your will.
I once did investigations for a Humane society in northern MN. I know this pert of their contract has negatives for both the adoption agency (SFTS) and the adopting family:
The contract can and does scare away potentially wonderful family's for pets in need.
One day, SFTS will exercise the terms of the contract and wind up on the wrong end of a expensive law suit, & they will probably lose. SFTS is just begging for a test case.
Furthermore, they do not need this clause in the contract to come into your home and investigate and confiscate. It is remarkably easy to get a court order and do it legally. This is how it's done:
You contact the Sheriff, present your evidence that so & so is mistreating an animal. The sheriff takes the evidence to a judge, the judge provides the warrant & the agency with the sheriff serves the warrant.
They don't need this in the contract. It serves no purpose & it's in conflict with their mission.