3 comments to “Geelong cat law drives up impounds; targets semi-owneds for removal”

  1. Margaret Dalziel | February 1, 2010 | Permalink

    i’m having an attack of speechlessness. That’s a pretty rare state for me. When I recover I will try to respond.
    Hard to see much future for the moggies in Geelong.

  2. Dr Harry Corbett | February 2, 2010 | Permalink

    No cat in Geelong shall see the sun unless it is through the bars of a cage.

    Any wooly thinking here? Those that most condemned zoos now want all cat owners to construct one in their backyard.

  3. Margaret Dalziel | February 2, 2010 | Permalink

    I’m still speechless.

    However! If councils really do want to be sincere about this problem they will have to look into it in a lot more depth and involve a lot more people.

    For many , the act of confining their cat forever to their own premises is going to be impossible.
    This is going to end up in chaos. If many of the cats causing problems are free living cats being fed by humane people the councils have to look at better ways to involve the community to get results.

    What about councils helping people instead of scaring the daylights out of them?

    They have ordered more traps to be used by the uninitiated and untrained? Traps can’t hurt the cat? I beg to differ, cats can be left in traps in the sun and suffer heat exhaustion, the cat can go ballistic in the trap and severely injure itself and the cat can be psychologically damaged by being confined whilst terrified. People should try sitting in a trap themselves and wondering how and when they will ever get out.

    Restrictive laws which take away the rights of domestic pets and their owners have one outcome: they turn people off.
    By turning people off you have increased numbers relinquished to pounds and increased numbers of animals dumped by those who still want to give the animal a chance through some serendipitous outcome.
    Then what follows is the survivors keep breeding. And the law makers make up more laws.