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Community cats are a community issue. Ongoing cooperation among various members of the community is critical to successful community cat management; however, the topic is often highly debated and emotionally charged when humane, conservation and scientific communities perceive their interests to be pitted against one another.
Fortunately, the San Francisco SPCA believes that all parties can – and should – work toward common goals of reducing the number of community cats and treating all animals humanely. As such, the SF SPCA eagerly took part in a progressive conference held last week that brought together scientists, technical experts and others with an interest in the issues tied to free-roaming, abandoned and outdoor cat populations.
The SF SPCA, like many other animal protection organizations, strongly supports community-based Trap-Neuter-Return (TNR) with ongoing management as the most humane, effective and viable approach to managing and reducing feral and free-roaming cat populations. Since its launch in 1993, the SF SPCA’s revolutionary citywide TNR program has served as a model for outdoor cat management. Through our TNR efforts, the SF SPCA constantly endeavors to maximize the quality of life of, and to stabilize and eventually reduce the population of, feral and free-roaming cats in San Francisco. The topics of discussion at last week’s conference clearly underscored the importance of our organization’s continued TNR efforts, not only in San Francisco, but also in other communities looking to emulate our approach to community cats.
