Mercury (Hobart)

Cat Bill seen as declawed

Plan would not ban roaming

- ANNE MATHER

THE age-old dog versus cat debate has taken a new twist in Tasmania.

With only days before submission­s are due for the state’s draft cat management laws, stakeholde­rs are urging the State Government to apply the same rules to cats as dogs.

Ten Lives Cat Centre manager Noel Hunt said he would have liked to have seen laws which forced people to contain cats to their homes or yards 24-7.

“The model we would like to see is that cats are treated the same as dogs and are required to be under your control or kept on your property,” he said.

Mr Hunt said the public was already becoming aware of the need to contain their cats, and the cat centre was seeing more people who were walking their cats on leads and buying outdoor cat enclosures.

“We do support the changes, but it’s disappoint­ing they don’t go far enough,” Mr Hunt said.

Tasmanian Cons e r v a t i on Trust director Peter McGlone said the Bill should have introduced mandatory containmen­t of cats.

“We support all the provisions but the one big thing that’s missing is any proposal to regulate roaming pet cats,” Mr McGlone said.

“If it’s good enough to control dogs it should be good enough to do the same thing with cats,” he said.

An early version of the draft cat management plan had proposed mandatory confinemen­t of cats, but the final version of the draft Cat Management Amendment Bill 2019 left it out.

The draft Bill, which is open for community feedback until close of business Friday, has proposed compulsory desexing and microchipp­ing of all cats, a limit of four cats per property unless a breeder, a registered cat breeder permit system and support for landowners to control roaming cats.

Under the plan, local councils are permitted to make bylaws relating to cat management.

Kingboroug­h Council has introduced bylaws on Bruny Island that could see cat owners fined $600 if they let their cats stray.

Mr McGlone said the State Government could have banned roaming cats across the entire state rather than waiting for councils to act.

Mr Hunt said cat containmen­t would require a staged introducti­on, which took into account the stress of suddenly changing the environmen­t of some older cats.

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