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TNR is the practice of trapping stray cats, getting them spayed/neutered and returning them to where they came from.
For a full guide to TRAP NEUTER RETURN, visit Alley Cat Allies. It is the best resource for TNR on the internet.
Click here for more TNR Resources.
Montgomery and Harris Counties have joined a very progressive movement for change in the way animal shelters handle animals.
The Montgomery County Animal Shelter has been 4 times over capacity for many years. It has been faced with terrible disease outbreaks and euthanasia for space. Other communities have developed better programs to not only lower the shelter’s intake (and save on your tax dollars), but these programs help lower the cat population overall. When you first see this, you will do what every person does. Releasing cats??? How does that reduce the population? That’s just crazy! Let’s go through this step by step…
Cats are territorial animals. If you remove a cat, more cats will show up as long as a food source is available. It is what is known as the vacuum effect. The only thing that will lower the number of cats in a region is to fix them and put them back to their outdoor home. The fixed cats keep the unfixed cats out of the territory. Did you know that cats can have up to 4 litters of kittens a year??? There have been ongoing studies for years at several major universities that show the cat population actually goes down when you return spayed/neutered cats to an area.
As we all know, many cats live happily outdoors and often time claim several families as their homes. Outdoor cats are fine as long as they aren’t delivering 4 litters of kittens a year and carrying on with those not so attractive mating behaviors like spraying, yowling and fighting.
Did you know it costs over $70 to house and kill a cat but it only costs $65 to fix, vaccinate it and release it? This is where The Huntsville Cat Project comes in. Rather than the cat entering into the shelter, it is diverted to the spay/neuter clinic to be fixed and put back where it lives.
Sick cats, old cats, declawed cats, owner turn ins, and kittens under 4 months of age will not go into this program. Did you know that over thousands of cats are euthanized in shelters every year? This number is actually bigger because it does not count those who died from disease and it does not count all of the baby kittens coming in with moms. That is a whole lot of tax dollars for something that has been proven not to work.
Returning community cats to where they live frees up space for some of the older and harder to adopt kitties. The return to owner rate on cats for MCAS was 52 out of 7,151 cats last year in 2016. That is just .007%. These cats have a better chance of getting home on their own from the street than from the shelter. It also frees up much needed funding, resources, enrichment and staff time for other animals…like dogs!
The program has worked in hundreds of cities across the country: Waco, TX; Jacksonville, FL; Indianapolis, IN; San Antonio, TX; College Station, TX; to name a few… Did you know that San Antonio was number one in the entire nation for killing animals in their shelters just a few years ago? Now they are not even on the radar!
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If you would like to donate toward The Huntsville Cat Project's efforts in your community, please click on the Donate button below. We are a Texas Non Profit Corporation and a 501c3 public charity. All donations are deductible to the full extent allowed by law.
For only $65 you can sponsor one kitty to be spayed or neutered and given a rabies vaccination.
Did you know if you turn feral (wild) cats into a shelter, they are killed? These cats cannot be put on display at a pet store. If you cannot pick it up and love on it, no one is going to adopt it as a house pet.
People with pet cats have trouble understanding that feral cats are basically wildlife. Not all cats can be tamed. These cats do serve a purpose. They control the rodent and snake population. Feral cats steer clear of people so they are not a health risk to the public.
As long as you agree to these 2 things, you can have a barn cat to help you out!
1. You must agree to confine the cat for 14 days so that it knows where it lives. You cannot simply release a cat at a new location. It will not stay.
2. You must agree to put cat food out once a day for the cat(s) so that the cat will stay. This will NOT prevent it from catching vermin.
Just contact us and we will get you fitted with your very own shiny new snake catchin' cat! They will be spayed/neutered and given a rabies vaccine.
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