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Ingrid Newkirk

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Have a Home for a Few Million Cats?

Posted: 06/04/2012 10:12 pm

June is Adopt-a-Shelter-Cat Month, and I implore anyone who has the time, resources, energy, and love to devote to a cat to consider opening your heart and home to a feline (or two!) in need. Shelters are overflowing with cats of every stripe, from frisky kittens to loyal "lap cats."

Unfortunately, finding a great home for even one cat is no easy task. Homes where cats will be played with daily, even when their guardians are tired or busy, where they will never have to tiptoe through filthy litterboxes, where they will be given scratching posts and perches instead of having their claws and toes amputated, and where they are treated as members of the family -- these are rare indeed.

After the Gulf oil disaster, PETA rescued nearly 30 "special-needs" cats from New-Orleans-area shelters. These cats had lived through the trauma of being abandoned by the people they loved, and many of them had spent years in cages surrounded by other sad, sick, and stressed felines and coping with physical problems such as, in one case, a misshapen face and, in another, a missing leg. It took a long time to place these cats, because our standards are high (as everyone's should be), and we won't let any animal go to a less-than-stellar situation.

Nearly two years later, three of these cats -- Bubbles, Brandi, and Marshall -- remain at PETA's office. They are absolutely delightful. Bubbles will leap into the air like a shortstop to intercept tossed balls of paper, Brandi proudly carries around a rubber lizard that she likes to brag about having "killed," and all three love to hang out in their multistory cat tree and attack the tail of whichever unsuspecting victim happens to be above them. We all want to see them adopted, but we refuse to put them in danger by giving them away for free or rushing them out the door and into a questionable home.

Animal shelters across the country face the same conundrum -- except that instead of having to find homes for three cats, they are charged with finding homes for dozens upon dozens of cats every week. As the PETA Practical Guide to Animal Rights points out, this is because breeders insist on cranking out more litters, pet-shop owners know that they can make a buck by selling kittens, and too many people don't consider the consequences of not having their cats (or the ones they've been feeding by the back door) spayed or neutered.

On any given day, the number of stray and surrendered cats who pass through animal shelters' doors far exceeds that of the people who are qualified and willing to give them homes. This leaves shelters in the heartbreaking position of having to euthanize many cats in order to accommodate the newcomers.

Some shelters try to make their euthanasia statistics look better by resorting to reckless practices such as giving cats away for free, or dangerous gimmicks such as promoting black-cat adoptions around Halloween. These tactics may move cats out the door, but they put them in danger of fates far worse than a painless death. Perhaps these shelters have never heard of Barry Herbeck, who tortured, sexually abused, and killed nearly two dozen animals whom he obtained through "free to a good home" ads, or of the gut-wrenching ways in which people torture and kill black cats around Halloween, either for "fun" or as part of a cruel ritual.

Re-abandoning feral cats on the streets is another way in which some shelters try to sidestep euthanasia, but ferals do not fare well on their own. Left to try to "fend for themselves," cats' lives are short and harsh. Many die after suffering excruciating urinary tract or other infections; crossing paths with cars, dogs, or unkind people; freezing to death in winter; or other horrific fates. Leaving cats at the mercy of the streets is not a solution to the animal homelessness crisis.

Adopting is important, but in the end it's like trying to bail out a sinking ship with a teaspoon. We can bail for all we're worth, but the ship is going to go down anyway unless we plug the hole in the bottom. Preventing more cats and dogs from ending up homeless in the first place, by passing mandatory spay/neuter legislation and restricting breeding, is the solution.

 
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June is Adopt-a-Shelter-Cat Month, and I implore anyone who has the time, resources, energy, and love to devote to a cat to consider opening your heart and home to a feline (or two!) in need. Shelters...
June is Adopt-a-Shelter-Cat Month, and I implore anyone who has the time, resources, energy, and love to devote to a cat to consider opening your heart and home to a feline (or two!) in need. Shelters...
 
 
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08:40 AM on 06/27/2012
Why should millions of Americans open their homes to adopt cats and dogs that are abused and abandoned then the end result we be more litters? If someone wants a pet fine go to an animal shelter and pick one but the idea of attempting to find homes for all of these animals is absurd. One thing Peta is doing right is euthanizing 85-95 percent of the animals they take in. You may not like it but the hard reality is the US has untold millions of unwanted pets. Americans have been watching way to many Disney movies. Pets are not toys they are a responsibility and part of that responsibility is making certain that they don't breed unchecked. Until we remedy the problem the only humane solution is to euthanize them.

What is needed are laws requiring shelters to neuter or spay these animals before they can be put up for adoption. Unless a person is a licensed breeder all pets need to be spayed or neutered.
07:59 PM on 06/09/2012
Facebook forward slash PetsonDeathRow or UrgentDogsofMiami. There should be a site like this for every city or state, you just have to look for it. Also a regular site called PetHarbor and the Humane Society have pictures of shelter animals online.
09:49 AM on 06/06/2012
If you think about it, most people get their cats for free (as doorstep strays or from friends and neighbors) and turn out to be loving pet parents. There are no data that correlate purchase price with future quality of life and plenty of pets with high adoption fees or from pet stores end up neglected or abused. Let's dial back our judgemetal clairvoyance about picking "good" pet adopters and focus on reducing the cat carnage in our nation's shelters. Let's start with the notion that people who come to shelters to adopt are mostly good people and substitute humane education in place of adoption rejection.

How about trying a new alternative and embracing trap-neuter-return for ALL stray cats, not just the feral ones? These cats already have a home, it's in the community. They should not be deprived of life-saving TNR just because they are socialized. North America is the only place in the world that restricts the definition of happy cats to those with a human address. In the South, our rescue groups tell us they would love to help the shelters but they are too full already. Some have had the same cats in foster homes or cages for months to years. Instead of encouraging the public to rip cats from their community homes and bring them to government shelters, let's stop the cycle of reproduction and let the cats live out their lives where they are.
02:53 PM on 06/05/2012
Thank you, thank you to all those who have adopted a cat. I think I'll add my kitty stories to the list too.

Bebe Kee came to me from a friend of a friend. The owner had five kittens and didn't know what to do with them (I can only hope the other four found a good home too). Two years later came Tilly. The neighbors know I'm an animal-friend and asked me if I wanted the runt (who is today by far not a runt any longer). A year and a half later came the tiny Claudia - the origional owners (not the woman I got her from) wanted to throw her along with her siblings in the river. I moved and took Claudia with me, my brother has the other two. Over a year ago I went for the first time to a humane society, this one a world away in Berlin (the wonderful Tierheim Berlin. It even has a 'retirement home for senior kitties). Claudia wasn't too thrilled about the pesty little Sharky at first, but now they're good buddies and play with eachother every day. All are spayed/neutered, none are declawed (aka amputated), all house cats. (Please, keep your cat indoors, not only for the reasons Ingrid listed, but outdoor cats do so much damage to wildlife). They bring so much joy! I would adopt one if I could, maybe in a year when there's a bit more money there for a kitten or two!
01:00 PM on 06/05/2012
It is so important to always spay/neuter and adopt animals from shelters! Thank you for this reminder, any animal that was bred for profit(or on accident because of reckless people who haven't spay/neutered their animals) is one less home for an animal in a shelter.
12:13 PM on 06/05/2012
On PETA's blog you can read about the work PETA does spaying and neutering cats and dogs, even providing transportation when needed. Every month, they provide no- to low-cost spay/neuter service for many hundreds of animals. Thank you, PETA, for helping fix the animal overpopulation crisis at the root.
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MSROADKILL612
love auto biographys. any appS to write mine?
11:55 AM on 06/05/2012
a natty device i heard of was a cat door triggered by the id chip

maybe can be locked at night?
11:16 AM on 06/05/2012
I have yet to adopt a cat from a shelter because cats always find me. I am in the process of trying to trap the latest stray, a handsome gray-and-white tomcat. I live in a nice neighborhood--but strays still show up all the time. Last summer, it was a pretty (declawed) calico who showed up, and a couple years before that a gentle giant tabby. A few years ago, my husband brought home a young pregnant black cat--still a kitten herself--who had been abandoned on a boat (also abandoned) at the marina where he kept his boat. Cats are considered disposable, just like leaky boats. It's shameful and it needs to change.
09:52 AM on 06/05/2012
As a volunteer for a kitten rescue on a military base, I see how grim the homeless and abandoned cat situation is every day. This kitten season has our cages and foster homes filled to the brim. We spend dozens of hours each week trapping, chasing, socializing, loving, and cleaning up after these little furballs, and they arrive faster than adopters do, in litters of 5 and 6, and sometimes more. Spay, neuter, and adopt!
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TechYes
I'm not dead yet.
09:33 AM on 06/05/2012
My rescue cat is a treasure and rules the two dogs with an iron claw. She was abandoned at just a few months old when her owners moved out of their apartment and didn't bother to take her with them. Needless to say, she was preggers by the time she adopted us but, fortunately, she'd avoided contracting the usual outdoor cat diseases, feline leukemia and FIV. She's our first experience with having a cat, and she's been an absolute joy. She LOVES jumping onto my lap and watching videos on YouTube.
09:25 AM on 06/05/2012
Thanks for reminding people...again, Ingrid. And because it just can't be said enough, SPAY or NEUTER!
09:24 AM on 06/05/2012
Well said. This article really sums up the problem and unlike a lot of articles addressing issues this is full of solutions and things we can do to help. It is usually a bit difficult to find ways to help with the problems you read about. This one is easy. ALWAYS ADOPT. ALWAYS SPAY AND NUETER. Always encourage others to do the same and keep the facts in this piece in your verbal arsenal when you need to defend the cause. I have been out and seen the feral cat problem. It is worse than you think. I have witnessed it and it is worse than I think. Spend a day in the rougher parts of your neighborhood and see the stray animal population for yourself. Cats are loyal loving animals and they desire peace and comfort just like we do.
09:21 AM on 06/05/2012
Having pulled cats out of car hoods where they were sliced open by a fan blade while trying to keep warm, and having helped execute search warrants to seize starving and sick cats from hoarders, and having seen numerous other horrific ends for outside cats (yes, ferals too, not just socilized indoor-outdoor), I agree with Ingrid and PETA that we have to change attitudes and practices. Cats need to be indoors always, and they should be spayed and neutered at 8 weeks of age. This week a foster home informed the shelter where I volunteer that they couldn't take in 6-week old kittens for two weeks because they had bred their own cat because the neighbors like her so much. Madness and selfishness!
09:03 AM on 06/05/2012
I agree with Ingrid--adopting is important and saves lives (my own two cats were adopted from a shelter), but spaying and neutering are the ultimate solution to the tragedies of animal homelessness. I urge anyone who hasn't yet had their cat or dog "fixed" to make an appointment to do so today. For the nearest low-cost spay/neuter services, call 1-800-248-SPAY.
08:55 AM on 06/05/2012
Thank you for this article. My husband and I have a cat with bad back hips from a shelter - I hate to think if we hadn't adopted him, no one would want him, because they're looking for a "perfect" or beautiful cat instead... So many cats out there deserving of a needing home, and it's up to us to spay and neuter to stem the tide.