New York Post

Claws are out on LI

Catfight over plan to evict park's kitties

- By REUVEN FENTON and BRUCE GOLDING

Cat lovers on Long Island have their backs up over a government plan to eliminate a long-establishe­d colony of feral felines from Bethpage State Park.

A sign posted last week near the park’s picnic area warned that officials “are in the process of removing” the dozen-plus kitties, which have been neutered by a group of do-gooders.

“The feeding and/or the maintainin­g of feral animals is not permitted within NY State Parks,” the sign said.

That assertion came as a shock to John Stravato, 67, who says he has cared for the cats since 2010 after being recruited by a parks worker to replace an older woman who had to give up the practice.

Stravato even has an official Volunteer Service Agreement — issued by the state Office of Parks, Recreation and Historic Preservati­on in 2015 — that gives him “continuous” authority to monitor the colony and ensure its “health and welfare.”

Stravato, a widower from Bethpage who has eight pet cats, said he called the office’s assistant regional director, Kevin Connelly, whose name and phone number were listed on the sign.

“He said they’re going to hire some people from different organizati­ons to help do the trapping,” Stravato recalled.

“He said their goal is not to euthanize them. When I tried to press him about where they would go, he didn’t really have a clear answer.”

Connelly had been involved in the removal of feral cats from Jones Beach State Park — following the 2018 settlement of a lawsuit filed by the American Bird Conservanc­y to protect flocks of endangered piping plovers — and was “going to do it all over Long Island,” Stravato said.

Meanwhile, word of the plan has spread among animal lovers. More than 2,900 have signed a petition at Change.org that seeks to block the cats’ removal and is organized by Jenny Luca of the TNR Task Force of Ronkonkoma, a nonprofit that traps, neuters and returns feral cats on Long Island.

Animal-rights lawyer Karen Copeland of Manhattan said the state’s plan would violate a law that makes it a misdemeano­r to abandon an animal because removing the cats from their habitat “is tantamount to abandonmen­t.”

She also said there was no provision in the agreement with Stravato that allows it to be canceled.

Becky Robinson, president and founder of Alley Cat Allies, a $10 million-a-year charity based in Maryland, said that “relocating outdoor cats is not the easy fix some may expect.”

“While this may temporaril­y reduce the number of community cats in a given area, it is ultimately counterpro­ductive, as the population of cats rebounds,” she said.

Neither Connelly nor the state parks office responded to requests for comment.

 ??  ?? PAW PATROL: Volunteer John Stravato feeds the feral cats of Bethpage State Park, which are slated for removal by the state.
PAW PATROL: Volunteer John Stravato feeds the feral cats of Bethpage State Park, which are slated for removal by the state.

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