August 30, 2014Comments are closed.cats, WA Cat Laws
The WA Cat Act is the jewel in the ‘mandatory desexing’ zealot’s crown. As legislation it included everything that a cat-law advocate could have dreamed of;
– it was enacted state-wide and every council was required to make provisions for it; to include it in their operations and to resource the enforcement of it. It was well-resourced by the state, with a $3.4m tax-payer funded gift to councils and local cat charities, to be used for both desexing programs and new cat pound facilities.
– it was retroactive; ALL cats are subject to the laws. They are also extremely comprehensive with cats needing to be desexed, microchipped, to wear a collar and registration tag, be registered with the local council. Also includes a ‘breeder licence’ element with cat sellers required to microchip all cats, and desex (or provide voucher) before sale.
– they give animal agencies almost unprecedented powers. Authorised officers can enter property, take photos and request paperwork… and all simply under the suspicion that a cat is being kept ‘illegally’. Cat pounds can have a cat microchipped and sterilised at the owner’s cost, while the fines for breaching the laws are considerable – $200 per offence, and up to $5,000.
Having nailed every element, the laws should have done what the advocates for the laws said they would do; reduce impoundment (and the subsequent killing) of cats.
These laws were suppose to ‘get’ the bad owners. That was the design. If we ‘got’ the bad owners, in theory, our cat problems would be solved. However, despite tens of millions of dollars being spent on their implementation, reports have shown “out of three of Perth’s larger councils, only one had issued fines since the laws came into place.” Unfortunately, cat laws simply don’t work how advocates claim they do – pounds get bigger, more cats are impounded, but laws do little to address the community’s cat issues.
To record the first year of the law’s implementation, I’ve done what advocates for these laws (including the government agencies responsible for implementing them) has NOT done – I’ve surveyed local councils on their cat impoundment numbers leading up to and since the passing of the Cat Act in November 2013.
Now, compared to the eastern states, increasing cat impoundments by around 3,000 individual animals might not be like much of a big deal. Because cats, who cares right? But to do it in just 8 months, and using the exact tools sold to the community as they key to ‘reducing cat impoundments’ is contemptible.
Thankfully community cat rescue groups have largely stepped up to take on the load, and its their compassion that is keeping this from being an all out bloodbath. But stuffing your charity pet groups to their limits with strays newly plucked from the street can hardly be considered a good outcome.
Of cource, there are two other sources of cat intakes stats missing from this information. Coincidentally, the two biggest advocates for the Cat Act passing in WA;
– In the last available year the major animal welfare charity in the state – the RSPCA WA – placed just 250 cats. They also closed their doors to cat intakes, so their input into managing these numbers will be minimal.
– The Cat Haven has been unable to provide me statistics for the financial year, with their year to date stats being released in the new year. I will update the blog when this new information becomes available.
There is a very good reason why practically all groups advocating for No Kill aims, reject mandatory desexing laws – because in execution, they fail in their aims and drive up shelter kill rates. Sadly, for the cats of WA, those who claim to advocate for cats have stubbornly refused to look at the science and experience of other cities and will be forced to learn about these failings first hand, at great detriment to the animals they claim to protect.
UPDATE: New stats
The WA Cat Act – year #1.
– The highest cat intakes in five years.
– Five times more cats entering the shelter population via council facilities than the year prior (and many WA councils aren’t processing cats yet, so this number likely to rise).
– Still only relatively small numbers of intakes – less than 10k pa – meaning zero influence on the overall cat population (taking around 1% of the overall population will not reduce that population)
– Only a nominal reduction in the number of cats entering the Cat Haven (464), despite many cities now taking their cat management in-house.
#urgh
See also: Wanna a little glimpse into the future WA? Check out what happened in Victoria.
I will say it again, mandatory desexing may not fix the problem, but at least the sale, and giving away of undesexed animals should be stopped. Without being able to purchase an undesexed animal all pet owners will end up with a desexed pet which at least will not be able to reproduce in large numbers contributing to an over population of strays. It wont stop people from collecting cat, owning multiple cats, letting their cats roam etc, but at least their cats wont be mating on your front lawn and leaving litters of kittens in your garden shed.
Yeah, I totally think you nailed it!
Screw those 3,000 cats and the risk to their individual lives. As cat advocates we should be the first to want to EXPAND this kind of thinking – the more cats we bring in to the pound the better!
Because, you know… yowling
And screw those people that think cat charities funded by cat lovers shouldn’t be in the business of lobbying for laws which increase intakes. It’s important to be being seen as doing ‘something’ even if that ‘something’ is simply delivering more cats up to their fate at kill pounds.
Besides, we can just tell people any increase in impoundments is due to a surge of public irresponsibility, a financial crisis or global warming… or some such thing.
And definitely screw those No Kill advocates who believe that a pound’s job shouldn’t be to steal people’s pets off them for arbitrary transgressions. How will the public ever learn otherwise!
I mean obviously some people will say it’s been demonstrably proven that compassionate and humane programs can achieve the same aims, without putting thousands of cat’s lives in danger, but what do they know? Impoundment is a strong lesson in keeping the hell away from us – in fact our pound system in WA won’t have reached maturity until we’re taking in thousands, or even tens of thousands of cats. The goal has always been growth, not solving the issue of pound killing.
Actually, have you met Graeme Smith of the Lost Dogs Home? He has a lot of the same thoughts – you guys would have a lot to talk about… http://www.savingpets.com.au/2014/04/twenty-years-of-cat-laws-success-for-pounds-not-cats/
Good comparison.
More legislation is not necessarily a good thing, unless it is well thought out, addresses the needs of the key stakeholders, and is backed by the balance of available science and research.
The cats have done nothing wrong. The government needs to provide some funding to ALL the animal rescue groups, but it should also have legislation which gives the animals some RIGHTS and so they at least have some hope of being re-homed. And what about the employment opportunities for people to work in this field?
I am a little confused. Armadale Council have impounded lots of cats since the laws came in. This I know for a fact.
Thanks Alex – I’ve gone back to council, clarified and updated. Thanks for the flag!