4 comments to “Profitable and popular – why cats can’t get a fair deal in Australia”

  1. Rosemary | December 17, 2010 | Permalink

    What’s the governance structure of the big Australian societies?

    Anyone who doesn’t think I’m doing a reasonable job can stand against me at the next AGM and try to get me voted out. (At which point they’d get a stack of invoices, and an Excel spreadsheet and have to get on with being my replacement, which might come as a bit of a shock.)

    Plus, of course, I’m not paid, so the only incentive to avoid rocking the boat is that we have to turn animals away if we haven’t got the funds to treat them.

  2. savingpets | December 17, 2010 | Permalink

    Here? Often its the worst of both worlds; a centralised ‘national office’ developing policy removed from the front line – hindering community centric projects, enforcing ‘strategic’ positions and quashing innovation at the local level… while the local, elected board involved to try and bring about changes for animals, are kept at arms length from operations by underperforming CEOs and shelter management.

    That is why the future is outside these organisation; this level of disfunction will only change through community pressure, not self-improvement.

  3. Rosemary | December 17, 2010 | Permalink

    Do Australian local branches not manage their own rehoming then? Over here roughly three-quarters of the total animal intake is rehomed by the branches and we can more or less do our own thing (subject to being expected to try to achieve MAWSand having premises inspected periodically by HQ staff).

    We elect 40% of the members of the governing council (rest are elected by ballot of the membership) so it would be very difficult for HQ to force through something the branches really felt strongly against (like killing 90% of our cat intake!).

    The major disadvantage is the difficulty of finding enough people willing to accept the level of responsibility involved and a tendency to dissolve into warfare when there’s disagreement about priorities – e.g. whether it’s better to save 10 animals by helping their owners with one-off vet treatment vs one injured stray that’s going to need a lot of very expensive treatment or pushing veganism vs improving farm animal welfare.

  4. savingpets | December 18, 2010 | Permalink

    While rehoming is gaining momentum (with a slow move toward positive, innovative marketing)… it’s not our biggest issue.

    Referencing a quote from your blog:

    Callers requesting collection of healthy, but apparently stray cats will normally be told we don’t believe it is in the cat’s best interest to remove it from an environment where it is thriving.

    That is awesome. Our major animal welfare groups still advocate that free-roaming cats should be removed. They take an active role in council trapping projects, and lobby for and support council curfews for owned animals. If you want to catch a healthy cat and take it to them, they’ll often lend you the trap. At the same time it’s common that they’ll only adopt to indoor homes – ‘barn cat’ adoptions are considered inhumane.

    Killing 90% of intakes in inevitable when you encourage impoundment of, and offer no alternative for, unsocialised adult cats.