3 comments to “Bendigo: a case study in cat management”

  1. rosemary | May 27, 2010 | Permalink

    Interesting that the US lost cat study seems (to UK eyes) quite horribly keen on ID tags although they do mention that some owners may be concerned about the risks of cat collars.

    As an off the top of my head guestimate I’d say something like 5% of our cat intake is a result of collar injuries.

    I absolutely agree that part of the solution to “the cat problem” is to educate people that healthy free-ranging cats should be neutered and any kittens rehomed, but there’s no sense in trying to insist that shelters take them all in.

  2. savingpets | May 27, 2010 | Permalink

    Hi Rosemary,

    Thanks for contributing! Its really great to have an ‘international’ perspective on this, as I think it highlights just how far behind we are in cat management in Australia.

    In Victoria (where Bendigo is located) through the nineties, cat ‘protection’ groups have, with government, driven changes to the way cats are managed.

    1) They made it illegal to feed unowned cats (I know!) People with semi-owneds, or colony cat carers we suddenly in breach of the new legislation.

    2) They started an advertising campaign which painted free-roaming cats as dark, diseased pests that needed to be removed – and semi-owners as irresponsible, asking them to instead trap and impound their cat.

    3) They began to lobby councils to bring in a host of cat control measures, including curfews, confinement and mandatory desexing.

    The result has been a spectacular failure in reducing either the free-roaming cat population, or shelter killing. In fact, Victoria is bucking international trends in humane cat management and is instead killing record numbers of cats, with no end in sight.

    How we got here: a brief history of the ‘Who’s for Cats?’ campaign (http://bit.ly/dtMtxw)

    Unfortunately, this is likely to continue indefinitely as those who drove these disasterous changes are still driving policy and being regarded as ‘experts’ today.

  3. Margaret Dalziel | May 27, 2010 | Permalink

    In this case it seems that there are many citizens who are better educated than the councils and government in Victoria in how to control the cat problem. We should encourage them to keep doing their underground work of tnr.

    Unfortunately, encouraging cat haters to trap and deliver to the pound and scaring the wits out of cat owners with fines and laws without offering any kind of assistance has given the council what they asked for: more cats to kill.

    The Who’s for (killing) Cats campaign is a nasty exercise and one that failed from its inception.

    Depressing to think of how long this will continue.


    Thankyou for posting this article. It is proof of their failed techniques.