The Hamilton Spectator

Feral cats running amok in Ontario’s Norfolk County

- PETER GOFFIN

Norfolk County is looking for help with thousands of stray and feral cats.

The county has a population of around 65,000 people and, according to the nearest humane society, an estimated 30,000 freerange felines.

In May, Norfolk put out a call for proposals for a cat control program.

Only the Simcoe and District Humane Society responded to the call, but its submission was disqualifi­ed when the county determined it was incomplete.

Now Norfolk is hanging on to the $50,000 earmarked for the winning submission, and waiting for a group to come forward with a long-term solution.

“Like any good program you don’t just do it one year,” said Chris Baird, general manager of Norfolk’s developmen­t and cultural services department.

“You have to do it over successive years or make it part of an ongoing operation.”

Animal welfare groups make a distinctio­n between stray cats, which are domesticat­ed pets who have wandered away from home, and feral cats, who were born in the wild or have lived in the wild for a long period of time.

Feral cats will often form colonies that can number well over 100-strong.

And while there are volunteer “colony managers” who feed or provide shelter for these packs, finding permanent homes for feral cats is not really an option.

“Trying to domesticat­e a feral cat is nearly impossible because they have been roaming free their whole life, and if you try to confine them it creates quite a stressful environmen­t for them,” said Alison Cross, a spokespers­on for the Ontario SPCA.

The OSPCA says the only “economical­ly viable and truly humane” way to manage feral population­s is to trap them, have them spayed or neutered, and then release them.

The agency loans out cage traps for volunteers to capture homeless cats and bring them in for spaying or neutering.

It also works with a Toronto organizati­on to offer training on how to care for feral cats as a colony manager.

Feral cat colony managers have to pay out of pocket for the animals’ food and veterinary bills, but the OSPCA does run a food bank of cat food that has been donated to them.

Cathie Hosken, of the Simcoe and District Humane Society, said her organizati­on deals with feral cat colonies all the time and receives 200 to 300 calls per month reporting large groups of cats.

“When we get calls, it’s not about five animals that need housing because their owner has passed away,” she added. “Our calls are for (groups of ) 27, 35, 68.”

But she said her agency is a strong proponent of the trap, neuter and release method, and tries to help people in the Norfolk area get stray and feral cats fixed.

Mostly that means helping people find the most affordable option or finding ways to offset the cost, especially for people looking after large numbers of cats, said Hosken.

Spaying or neutering costs $60 at the OSPCA.

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