Wednesday, March 27, 2013

What TNR can do for YOU!

(and the cats in your life)


Curly, July 2012
This past summer, I came downstairs one morning to find a new cat huddled outside our back door.  His head was two sizes too large for his scrawny frame, and his face bore the scratches so common among young males on the street, trying to eke out their place in the 'hood.  I immediately gave him two things - food, and the next spot on my mental to "do" list.  The first, he gobbled down with great enthusiasm.  The second, he was blissfully unaware of.

Curly, February 2013
Eight months later, Curly is the biggest, handsomest cat on the block, sporting his ear-tip like a proper badge of honor...and is a perfect gentleman to our resident colony "queen" Peaches.  She often lets him eat right beside her at mealtime.  I'd almost forgotten that scared adolescent when I found the photos...and had to share. In this case, a picture really is worth a thousand words. That's a happy cat.

Do you have an amazing "before and after?"  We'd love to hear about it, and see pictures...send to us at tnr@siferal.org, and let us know if we have your permission to share!

Tuesday, February 5, 2013

TNR and the REAL No-Kill equation

an interview with SIFI's Founder, Elena Bass

~ transcribed and edited by Esther Koslow - published by SRAC (Shelter Reform Action Committee)



Some of our readers may be unfamiliar with the acronym “TNR.”  It refers to a method of controlling the free-roaming cat population in any given area, and stands for “Trap/Neuter/Return.”

Here’s how Neighborhood Cats (New York’s leading feral cat interest group,) and the Staten Island Feral Initiative (a Staten Island-based TNR education and advocacy organization) explain the need for TNR:

The Problem: Too Many Cats Living on the Streets

Tens of thousands of street cats live in the alleyways, backyards, and outdoor spaces of New York City. They are the offspring of lost or abandoned pet cats and, unneutered, they go on to spawn new generations. These cats often group themselves together in packs known as “colonies.” Many of their nuisance behaviors can be attributed to instinctual behaviors that would likely cease if they were sterilized. These behaviors include noise from fighting and mating, the perpetual birthing of kittens, and the smell from the spraying of pheromone-laced urine.

Because the majority of these cats are not socialized to humans, they are not candidates for adoption. The breeding of these street cats not only creates a neighborhood crisis, it also results in more cats and kittens entering the shelters — taking away cage space (for the ferals) and homes (for the friendly cats) that would otherwise go to the cats and kittens already there, awaiting adoption. Most feral cats and kittens taken in at City shelters [run by Animal Care & Control] are killed because they are not adoptable as house pets.

Beside the humane cost of needless killing, the City must shoulder higher costs for municipal animal control.  Throughout NYC, TNR is proving effective in humanely managing feral cat colonies and reducing their numbers over time.”

Elena Bass


We recently interviewed ELENA BASS, Founder and Director of the Staten Island Feral Initiative, or “SIFI,” to learn more about the importance of TNR as part of a comprehensive approach to achieving a No-Kill animal-care system.  

Elena emphasizes that, "You don't need to be a cat-lover to support or to practice TNR.  You simply need to share the goal of fewer cats on our streets."