January 3, 2012Comments are closed.cats, council pound, mandatory desexing
Like all councils in Victoria, Kingston has had compulsory pet microchipping and registration since 2007. In 2008/09 Council had 6,529 registered cats in their area and were impounding less than one cat a day (266). Despite the low number of cats ending up in the pound, cat welfare groups pressured the council to look at introducing cat management legislation targeting cat owners; requiring compulsory registration of pets over 3 months old and that all pets be desexed before registration… or mandatory desexing by stealth.
Have all these shiny, shiny new laws solved their cat ‘problems’? Of course not. As we’ve seen time and time again, mandates which target owners do little to improve outcomes for cats as overwhelmingly, cats who have owners aren’t the ‘problem’. It’s the large population of unowned cats who need help.
It did have an effect however; by 2009/10 – just one year later – the number of registered cats dropped to 5,920, putting more cats at risk of being killed at the pound by being unregistered.
Unsatisfied, the council in 2010 added a night time curfew to their cat management laws;
Kingston cat owners who let their moggies roam the streets at night will face a $60 fine from next month. The council’s controversial cat curfew comes into effect from Monday, November 1, grounding cats from dusk till dawn.
The curfew supported by the RSPCA and the Cat Protection Society;
Cat Protection Society executive director Dr Carole Webb said a curfew, already adopted by several Melbourne councils, was in the animals’ interests because it cut the risk of injury and spread of diseases such as feline AIDS.
So now they had their curfew, what happened next?
Once the curfew is official… the council will issue warning notices and ads before starting an after-hours’ trapping program.
Council acknowledged that the introduction of the curfew enables Council to more effectively target wild cat colonies and remove them from the community, minimising the chance of trapping owned domestic cats.
Council Annual Report 2009/10
Council was given the blessing of animal welfare groups to trap and kill cats without owners.
And they aren’t only trapping neighbourhood strays, they’re encouraging people to lure cats onto their property with food;
If you have a nuisance cat that you’d like us to remove from your property, your cooperation will be needed to establish a regular feeding time. To ensure the cat can be easily found when officers come to your property, you should feed it during business hours at the same time, and place each day. A feeding pattern should be established over a minimum period of at least 7 DAYS. The cat should NOT to be fed for 24 HOURS before the day the officers are to attend for trapping.
Remember, this council is being held up by cat ‘welfare’ as a council doing right by cat welfare;
Cat Protection Society executive director Dr Carole Webb said the (Kingston) curfew benefited the community and protected cats…
“I think all-round night containment is a win-win situation for everyone,” Dr Webb said.
So after all these moves to improve cat ‘welfare’, what’s the situation for cats in Kingston?
Well, the impound rate for cats remained constant;
2008/09 – 266
2009/10 – 295
2010/11 – 254
(Council Annual Reports)
(Whether ‘colony culls’ are included in these figures is unclear – the idea that anything trapped ‘after hours’ can be classified as unowned/feral and able to be killed immediately, certainly leaves this figure open to interpretation.)
And despite assertions that these laws would somehow improve cat health, feline ‘AIDS’ or FIV is still a problem the cat community.
But most worryingly, the community’s feelings around cats have changed. Having set the communities expectation that cats should be confined or removed;
Cruelty against cats in the area seem to be on the increase;
Our pet hate is cruelty in Kingston
Kingston pet owners are under fire after the number of animal cruelty complaints rose by almost 60 per cent during the past financial year…
And all cats are at risk from the newly empowered cat trappers;
The two-year-old cat was taken to the pound on December 16 with pus seeping from her nose and face after a White St resident alerted Kingston Council to Spotty’s capture.
‘‘We let her out in the morning (December 15) and she didn’t come home, which was a bit strange.’’
….
The RSPCA warned against residents taking matters into their own hands regarding animal cruelty. “If people are concerned they should contact their local authorities to ensure the most effective and humane method of control is used,” senior inspector Simon Primrose said.
Seems cats have two choices; death in the hands of council, or torture at the hands of cat haters – things go from bad to worse for the cats of Kingston.
Surely suggesting that people befriend strays by feeding them so that they can be captured and killed is pretty much mandating animal cruelty? The idea is a horrible one and should surely make any ethical person recoil in disgust. When the outcome is certain death the act is one of betrayal of a fragile trust between species.