Laserfiche WebLink
But, how does dumping feral and stray cats --even if sexually sterilized --into high -traffic streets <br />and garbage -strewn, disease -ridden sidewalks and alleys "save" their lives. This merely <br />sustains or increases the number of painful ways they are killed --but, they don't count in the <br />shelter's stats! <br />That's not the whole story! TNR has become a lucrative industry in the U.S., not just a <br />neighborly compassionate effort or an expenditure of the City's budget <br />Designating a city "No Kill" by the small percentage of homeless animals (dogs, cats and <br />others) that physically enter the shelters and the number released (called the 'live -save rate') <br />does not consider the thousands that roam the streets ;;nrl are deliberately ignored <br />and not picked up and impounded. Ignoring them in the communities of greatest need and least <br />political influence does not mean they aren't "killed" by the City's inaction --left in gutters and <br />alleys with their lifeless bodies picked up by sanitation trucks <br />Also contributing is the fact that there has been no directed enforcement of Los Angeles' <br />mandatory spay/neuter law for cats (including outdoor cats), as there is for dogs, since <br />Barnette's arrival as LAAS General Manager, nor any campaign emphasizing that it is a serious <br />violation of law to abandon a cat. <br />The lack of true concern for stopping animals from a life in the streets has been replaced by <br />a nationwide acceptance --even encouragement --glorifying the life of feral cats, along with <br />continual requests by non-profit organizations for donations to "make their lives better" in the <br />streets. There is little concern about the up -to 3.7 million wild birds that are killed annually -- <br />many by well-fed cats, according to USA Today. <br />The oxymoron is that responsible cat -rescue groups will adamantly refuse to adopt a cat to <br />anyone who will not sign an agreement to keep it inside, and yet some of them also advocate <br />TNR rather than more stringent ownership law enforcement. If the life of feral cats <br />is not dangerous, dirty, disease -ridden and filled with the terror of impending harm, why aren't <br />housecats allowed to be released into yards after adoption? <br />AUSTRALIA CONSIDERING A BAN ON ALL OUTDOOR CATS <br />It is estimated that cats kill 377 million birds and 649 million reptiles every year in Australia, <br />according to a 2017 study published in the journal Biological Conservation. <br />