The New York City Feral Cat Initiative (NYCFCI) is a program of the Mayor's Alliance for NYC's Animals that works to humanely reduce the number
of outdoor community cats in NYC and improve the plight of those cats currently living outdoors through the humane, non-lethal method of Trap - Neuter - Return (TNR).
Trap - Neuter - Return humanely reduces the number
of outdoor community cats by preventing new litters.
Not exact matches
The
Cats On My Block by Valerie Sicignano This picture book, written by Valerie Sicignano, Community Outreach Director of the NYC Feral Cat Initiative of the Mayor's Alliance for NYC's Animals, introduces young children to the world of outdoor c
Cats On My Block by Valerie Sicignano This picture book, written by Valerie Sicignano,
Community Outreach Director
of the NYC Feral
Cat Initiative
of the Mayor's Alliance for NYC's Animals, introduces young children to the world
of outdoor catscats.
She describes the challenges
of outdoor colony care through harsh Chicago winters, the time and effort that goes into completing a successful and safe relocation, neighbor relations in a range
of communities, the vacuum effect that results when
cats are removed from an area, and many other topics that arise when working with
community cats.
In a project called «Architects for Animals,» founded four years ago by Leslie Farrell, and presented by the Mayor's Alliance for NYC's Animals, some
of the city's most renowned architectural firms and designers design and build delightfully original winter shelters for New York City's
outdoor «
community»
cats to provide them with a refuge from the cold.
The first and largest program
of its kind in the Atlanta area, LifeLine's
community cat program provides below - cost vet care, free food, and assistance to unowned,
outdoor cats throughout greater Atlanta.
At the recent
Outdoor Cat Conference held in Los Angeles in December, 2012, Jon Cicirelli, the Deputy Director
of the City
of San Jose Animal Care & Services Department, attributed his
community's success to the implementation
of a trap - neuter - return prgram known as Feral Freedom.
TNR addresses the needs
of outdoor cats and the
communities in which they live.
Community cats are humanely trapped, spayed / neutered, vaccinated, and eartipped (the universal sign that a
cat has been part
of a Trap - Neuter - Return program), and then returned to their
outdoor home.
TNR makes great public policy — it is a purposeful and balanced approach that helps improve the coexistence
of outdoor cats and humans in their shared
communities.
It's important to be familiar with the history
of cat domestication, as those who oppose TNR often think
community cats are homeless and don't belong
outdoors.
You have experienced trappers or caregivers who want to share their knowledge
of community cats and TNR with anyone concerned about
cats living
outdoors.
Holodenschi has also formed strong ties with the local Humane Society, including setting up a TNR program to move unadoptable
community cats out
of the shelter by providing spay or neuter services and returning them to their
outdoor homes.
Why they harm
cats: leash laws are dangerous because any
cat who is
outdoors — whether she is someone's pet who is outside for a period
of time, either intentionally or by accident, or a
community cat — is subject to impoundment.
While it might be tempting to place our own desires for the comforts
of indoor living on
cats, the truth is
community cats prefer living
outdoors.
The opening workshop
of the day, «Helping
Cats in Your
Community,» will demonstrate the steps involved with Trap - Neuter - Return (TNR), the only humane and effective approach to
outdoor cat populations.
Removing at - large provisions or leash laws, or exempting
community cats from this type
of provision, allows healthy
community cats to go through a TNR program and continue to live and thrive in their
outdoor homes.
The bill will help ensure that
community cats are quickly moved out
of shelter facilities and returned to where they belong — their
outdoor homes.
Practice Trap - Neuter - Return (TNR), the process
of humanely trapping
community cats, bringing them to a veterinary clinic to be spayed or neutered and vaccinated, and then returning them to their
outdoor homes.
You are experienced trapper or caregiver who wants to share their knowledge
of community cats and TNR with anyone concerned about
cats living
outdoors.
They make sure
community cats, part
of the fabric
of our society, undergo Trap - Neuter - Return (TNR), the process by which
cats are spayed or neutered, vaccinated, and returned to their
outdoor home.
Although the actual impacts
of community cats compared to pet
cats on wildlife are hotly debated, one issue that is not is that the capacities
of most shelter programs are simply insufficient to decrease the overall number
of outdoor cats in a
community.
Feral
cats are part
of the
community, and it is expected that you will continue to care for the
cat by providing water and feeding the
cat to keep it is as an «
outdoor»
cat.
Becky Robinson, the president and founder
of Alley
Cat Allies, says, «From the pet
cats in your home to the
outdoor cats in
communities around the world, all
cats deserve our care and protection.»
If you want a more detailed graphic that also accounts for the presence
of outdoor pet cats in the community, you can use either the U.S. or Canada version of the «Outdoor cat population calculator&
outdoor pet
cats in the
community, you can use either the U.S. or Canada version
of the «
Outdoor cat population calculator&
Outdoor cat population calculator».
AHS has partnered with the Animal Defense League
of Arizona and other
community partners to develop an expanded TNR program to help reduce
outdoor cat populations in the Valley.
• Have not: o We continue working toward a world where healthy
cats are no longer «euthanized» in shelterso We work toward establishing TNR programs in all communitieso We need to increase public understanding
of outdoor cats» role in the
community.
We have developed world - recognized best practices for humane care
of outdoor cats, and have produced materials, trainings, and advice on these practices for the millions
of Americans providing care to stray and feral
cats in their
community.
Around the country, thousands, if not millions,
of community cat caretakers — studies show approximately 10 to 14 percent
of households — feed
outdoor colonies, some supplying winter shelters packed with straw and spending their weekends trapping, neutering and returning (TNR) feral and semi-feral
community cats.
We also manage the Barn /
Outdoor Cat Program and the
Community Cat Program where otherwise unadoptable but healthy
cats are returned to where they came after being altered, vaccinated and ear - tipped - these programs saves the lives
of hundreds
of cats every year.
Through Trap - Neuter - Return (TNR) and other innovative
community partnerships and programs, we are committed to giving free - roaming
outdoor cats a better quality
of life by moving away from euthanasia as the only solution to our current
cat overpopulation issue.
• We have: o Made TNR mainstream and accepted as the only effective approach to
outdoor cat populationso Established the Feral Friends Networko Brought together experts and advocates for the first
community cat conference in Americao Transformed shelters through advocacy and guidanceo Established the ongoing Boardwalk
Cats Project in Atlantic City, NJo Founded National Feral Day, a national day
of action that has grown to include events in all states and many countries worldwide.
Community cats, the free roaming outdoor cats who populate nearly every community in the country, are well managed in the city of Austin thanks to a robust Trap - Neuter - Return program and dedicated feline caretakers who look after the cats and ensure they are vaccinated and st
Community cats, the free roaming
outdoor cats who populate nearly every
community in the country, are well managed in the city of Austin thanks to a robust Trap - Neuter - Return program and dedicated feline caretakers who look after the cats and ensure they are vaccinated and st
community in the country, are well managed in the city
of Austin thanks to a robust Trap - Neuter - Return program and dedicated feline caretakers who look after the
cats and ensure they are vaccinated and sterilized.
Approximately 60 %
of owned pet
cats are allowed
outdoors, which means that about half
of cats seen
outdoors are
community cats and half are owned pet
cats.
Studies across the U.S. have shown that TNR not only curtails nuisance behavior, but it also costs less, drastically reduces shelter euthanasia, and, over the long run, will reduce the
outdoor cat population
of a
community.
A coalition
of Guelph groups working with Nature Canada's Keep
Cats Safe & Save Bird Lives campaign are calling on the community to help keep both safe by keeping cats from roaming outdoors unsupervi
Cats Safe & Save Bird Lives campaign are calling on the
community to help keep both safe by keeping
cats from roaming outdoors unsupervi
cats from roaming
outdoors unsupervised.
Approximately 60 %
of pet
cats are allowed
outdoors, resulting in a total
of 82,000 pet and
community cats roaming the county.
To this end, SHS houses a full - service public veterinary hospital; clean and inviting apartments for adoptable
cats, dogs, rabbits and other small animals; classrooms for
community education; executive offices; a barn full
of country critters; multiple
outdoor training and play spaces; and an organic garden.
Outdoor (
community, stray and barn)
cats are eligible for a $ 40 package that includes spay / neuter surgery, rabies and FVRCP vaccinations, flea treatment, ear tip, pregnancy termination and treatment for any other parasites found at the time
of surgery.
The New York City Feral
Cat Initiative is a coalition
of more than 150 animal rescue groups and shelters whose joint mission is «to raise awareness about the thousands
of...
community cats living
outdoors throughout NYC's five boroughs, to offer solutions to prevent the number
of homeless
cats from increasing, and to successfully manage existing colonies.»
Although the actual impacts
of community and pet
cats on wildlife are hotly debated, one fact is clear: the capacities
of most shelter programs are simply insufficient to decrease the overall number
of outdoor cats in a
community.
Since
community (feral or free - roaming)
cats are happiest living
outdoors and are at great risk
of being killed if they enter shelters, our
community cat spay / neuter voucher program was created to keep them out
of shelters, while gradually reducing their numbers.
In the state
of Virginia, Alley
Cat Allies is raising awareness and educating the community about outdoor cats, community cat colony care, Trap - Neuter - Return, and advocating for humane policies for all ca
Cat Allies is raising awareness and educating the
community about
outdoor cats,
community cat colony care, Trap - Neuter - Return, and advocating for humane policies for all ca
cat colony care, Trap - Neuter - Return, and advocating for humane policies for all
cats.
We're working to advocate for anti-cruelty laws that protect every
cat in the United States, regardless
of whether the
cat is a companion,
outdoor, or
community cat
This is a strong indicator that the number
of outdoor cats breeding in these
communities is being reduced significantly.
The millions
of cats who make their homes
outdoors are called
community cats, also known as feral
cats.
Tens
of thousands
of stray and feral
cats, collectively called
community cats, live in the
outdoor spaces
of New York City.
Trap - Neuter - Return reduces the number
of community cats living
outdoors by placing socialized
cats into adoption programs, and by stopping the breeding cycle
of cats who live outside through spaying and neutering.
Visit the NYC Feral
Cat Initiative
of the Mayor's Alliance for NYC's Animals website to read about how Trap - Neuter - Return (TNR) humanely reduces the number
of community cats living
outdoors, and how you can help by attending one
of our free TNR certification workshops.
United Paws Low Cost Spay Neuter Clinic offers sliding scale spay / neuter surgeries for pets
of lower income, disabled or unemployed persons and $ 5 spay / neuters for any
community «feral»
cats or
outdoor homeless kitties.