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09/17/2019
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CORRESPONDENCE - NON-AGENDA
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Right now if you go to OC Animal Care in all seven cat cottages, there are cages and cages <br />of kittens, last weekend, we counted maybe 10 adult cats over 2 years old the rest were all <br />kittens, and does the general public know why, because OC Animal Care is taking all the <br />healthy adoptable adult cats and dumping them back into the community with the <br />ideology that most people are good and the community will help take care of these cats. <br />We are here to inform and educate the general pu,, ,,, m: khe ui,.—ace between TNR and <br />RTF and let the general public know that they have been misled of the situation by OC <br />Animal Care. <br />OC is doing a massive damping of healthy adoptable cats back into the community with <br />the thought process that the community will help take care of these cats. The problem is <br />OC Animal Care has not alerted or educated the community that these healthy adoptable <br />cats are being dumped in their neighborhoods, they are providing no follow up or after <br />care for those cats, these cats are not feral. <br />To understand RTF, we should first describe Trap, Neuter, Return [TNR], or Trap, <br />Neuter, Return and Maintain [TNRM]. The cats most likely to benefit from these <br />programs are feral cats—unsocialized descendants of people's abandoned and discarded <br />pets. The New York rescue group Neighborhood Cats provides an excellent description of <br />what feral cats are and are not: <br />While they live outside human homes and exhibit wild behavior, feral cats are not wildlife. <br />The vast majority rely on some form of human -based food source for their sustenance, <br />whether its a caretaker who feeds daily, a dumpster behind a supermarket or scraps left on <br />fishing docks. Very few subsist on hunting alone. <br />They also point out that "feral" is a behavioral chmtiiological one. <br />Other cats that may be "swept up" in RTF and TNR programs include pet cats that <br />people have abandoned, kittens born outdoors but still young enough to be fully socialized <br />to people, loosely owned outdoor cats that no one takes full responsibility for, lost cats, <br />and owner surrendered cats. Currently, cats living outdoors without clear owners are <br />collectively referred to as "community cats." <br />From September 2018 through June 2019 Orange County Animal Care released more <br />than 1,000 cats and kittens back into Orange County Communities , these cats and <br />kittens were left to fend for themselves on our streets, in our parks, in fields and even at <br />malls. <br />Some had never been socialized to humans, and quickly faded into the brush, or scooted <br />behind trashcaus to hide. Others, accustomed to friendly faces and food served in a bowl, <br />were confused and alarmed by their fate. <br />
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