In state legislatures around the country, lawmakers are debating important subjects ? education reform, election laws, gun control and abortion. But in Florida, one of the hottest issues to come before the Legislature this term involves cats.
There, lawmakers are considering a contentious bill that would offer legal protection to groups that trap, neuter and return feral cats to their colonies.
An Alternative To Shelters
Larry Wasserscheid, a volunteer with a Miami group called The Cat Network, has brought a stray cat to a church parking lot in the city's Little Havana neighborhood.
"This cat was at the Hurricane Cove Marina and Boatyard, where I was working on my boat and found five cats. And this is the fourth one that we're getting fixed here," he says.
The Cat Network is here every month, offering free spaying and neutering. There are more than 40 volunteers like Wasserscheid ? people who trap the strays and bring them to the group's mobile vet unit to be fixed.
The group operates a trap-neuter-return program. It's actually more than a program; it's a movement that began in England and has spread throughout the U.S. since the 1990s.
Megan Clouser, the organization's president, says it started as people became aware of all the stray animals that were being killed in shelters.
"Unfortunately, we've been doing that for about a hundred years now," she says. "So why not try something that keeps the animals out of the shelter and keeps them sterilized so they aren't reproducing?"
Inside the mobile unit, a vet and her three assistants are busy. There are a dozen cats in carriers. One by one, the cats' stomachs are shaved. Clouser says they're given rabies shots, sedated and then either neutered or spayed.
"In addition to the actual sterilization, they also get the ear tip, in which the left ear is clipped ? it goes straight across. And then anybody who's involved in the trap-neuter-return program will know that that animal has been sterilized," she says.
Clouser calls it a labor of love: All of those involved are volunteers, doing it because they like cats and want to help.
'A Nightmare For Us'
But not everyone thinks those activities are a good thing.
"It's just been a nightmare for us," Charles Hall said at a recent hearing before a state Senate committee in Tallahassee.
Hall said he and his wife lived next door to a colony of 40 to 50 feral cats. The noise, the nuisance and the smell were a big problem, he said, and he worries that trap-neuter-return programs aren't helping.
"We no longer have rights," Hall said. "The cats have taken over our rights."
The bill before Florida's Senate, brought forward by community cat groups, would protect and promote trap-neuter-return programs by removing an obstacle that the groups say has halted these programs in some areas: a state law against abandoning cats.
Denise Lasher works with Best Friends Animal Society, the organization that helped write the bill. "All we're doing is clarifying that, under the definitions of community cat program, [trap-neuter-return programs] would not be abandonment under the state law," she told the Senate committee.
Opponents Question Program's Benefits
There were plenty of cat lovers at that hearing, but almost an equal number opposed to the bill. Some cited a threat to public health.
But the best-organized opposition to the Florida bill comes from those with their own furry and feathered creatures to protect: wildlife groups, especially those that represent birdwatchers.
Bob Johns of the American Bird Conservancy says that although cats make nice pets, they don't belong in the wild.
"Feral cats are not native to North America. And they frankly did not evolve in this environment," he says. "So wildlife never evolved any defenses against this predator."
A study published earlier this year by the Smithsonian and the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service found that outdoor cats are the leading cause of death for birds in the U.S., killing between 1.4 billion and 3.7 billion birds annually.
What's not clear is whether trap-neuter-return programs actually reduce feral cat populations. Some studies show that, even when they're targeted by the programs, cat colonies often continue to grow.
Dozens of cities around the country and a few states have adopted laws and ordinances supporting trap-neuter-return programs. Wildlife groups are hoping to block the legislation here to stop Florida from following suit.
Source: http://news.wpr.org/post/florida-bill-looks-aid-feral-cats-opponents-claw-back
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Google for this complete string, as-is, including all quotes:
ReplyDelete"Licensing and laws do nothing to curb the problem." AND "I don't see anyone dumping cats where I live anymore." AND "irreversible consequences"
Therein you'll find an answer that works 100%, is affordable by any individual or size of community, and the cat problem is completely resolved PERMANENTLY in less than 2 seasons. Guaranteed.
People who let cats roam free only do so because they think their disease-ridden INVASIVE SPECIES cats are going to live idyllic lives chasing and torturing animals and butterflies (valuable native species) or someone else will take care of their vermin cat for them. If they realize that that cat will die within hours or days from them having dumped it or letting it roam free, the dumping and free-roaming of cats stops 100%. They can't just believe it MIGHT happen, they have to KNOW that IT WILL HAPPEN. It worked where I live! I've not seen even ONE cat in OVER THREE YEARS now.
Did I mention that you have to ignore every last thing these deranged invasive species lovers are spewing to the world? That's the most important part. Asking them for advice and help to solve the problem that they created and are hellbent on perpetuating is just as foolish as asking your local career thieves for their advice and help to hide your valuables from their daily motives, goals, and activities.
If anyone else is similarly plagued by criminally irresponsible cat-lickers where you live, following is a link describing some of the most effective methods that I invented to accomplish eradicating hundreds of these destructive invasive species vermin, by myself, on large tracts of land, in heavy brush and dense woods. The eradication so complete that I've not seen one cat in over three years. All done in only a couple of seasons, all for less than the price of a couple cups of coffee. (If you too also get your ammo on sale, I got 5000 rounds of .22s for only $15, that's 3 cats per penny!): www.americanhunter.org/blogs/arkansas-will-trap-feral-cats
For nighttime the scented trails along all roadsides and infra-red surveillance system was best [you can get excellent IR video cameras on ebay for only $15 today, the 48LED ones being best, use this search string there: CCTV (IR, infra-red) ]. For daytime (believe it or not) learning the predator-alarm calls of my local gray-squirrels was best. They would never fail to alert me to the presence of, lead me directly to, and even point out the exact location of every cat each and every time.
In areas where there are firearms ordinances preventing this, then check into any air-rifles with ballistics speeds of 700-1200fps and using pointed vermin pellets. The newer ones even come with their own sound-suppressors built right-in, being specifically designed for shooting vermin cats in urban areas, the demand for them is that great.
Shoot to maim is punishable under the laws that define animal-cruelty, and rightly so. (These are the ONLY cases that cat-lickers' cite to try to scare everyone from shooting their vermin cats.) But shoot to kill is a perfectly legal way to humanely destroy any animal. The same laws and principles that apply to methods of humanely hunting animals also applies to cats.
You MUST take direct relentless action against ALL feral and stray cats, collared or not. For collared stray cats are the very source of every last feral cat. If you don't destroy them too then you have done NOTHING to solve the problem. No trapping program in the world has been able to catch-up to cats' breeding rates, this is precisely why Trap & Kill failed as well as Trap, Neuter, Re-abandon (TNR) is an even bigger failure. Actively and aggressively hunting them down, employing "hunted to extirpation" methods, is the ONLY way to get ahead of and stay ahead of cats' breeding rates and the rates at which criminally-irresponsible cat-lickers let more cats be born and dumped outdoors.
Good luck!