Los Angeles Times

Feral cats need human help

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Re “A good start on feral L. A. cats,” editorial, Dec. 20

Thank you for your editorial on managing Los Angeles’ feral cat colonies. I have been working with the successful trap- neuter- return program ( TNR) at Cal State Long Beach since 2007, and the number of cats I care for has declined from more than 100 to just two.

This was accomplish­ed by adding an “M” to TNR. Our dedicated group of volunteers also managed the colony. We worked with the university administra­tion to set up designated feeding areas, provided daily food and water, provided veterinary care to sick or injured animals, and found homes for tame cats.

As the number of cats declined, the number of wild animals increased. Now there are more raccoons, possums, skunks and, yes, rats, thus providing adequate food for the coyotes that roam the campus.

One might have expected an increase in the number of birds, but this has not happened, possibly due to the severe pruning of many trees and the removal of others in favor of new buildings. Dorothy Burstein

Los Alamitos

It is a pity that the Los Angeles Department of Animal Services has failed to proactivel­y educate the public about the importance of spay and neuter, or to enforce the city’s decades- old control laws. Instead, the city has focused primarily on promoting adoption, treating one symptom of the problem, not pet overpopula­tion itself.

TNR, as originally developed, calls for managed colonies overseen by caretakers in locations where the cats are accepted and safe. These days, it is rife with problems: Where it lacks proper management, it has morphed into the dumping of marginally socialized and friendly cats into inhospitab­le locations.

Los Angeles must include registered caretakers who feed and watch over truly feral cats, endeavor to thoroughly sterilize colonies, and provide timely reports about the animals’ welfare. It must also get a handle on the cats’ exponentia­l birthrates by providing more low- cost sterilizat­ion venues and enforcing its spay/ neuter laws. Wendy Aragon

Long Beach The writer is president of the Pet Assistance Foundation.

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