Lethbridge Herald

City Hall’s lack of considerat­ion for cat ranch is heartless

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Editor:

Lethbridge City Hall’s callousnes­s towards the homeless felines at the Last Chance Cat Ranch somewhat reminds me of the heartlessn­ess exhibited by the city hall of Surrey, a city neighbouri­ng mine.

Along with individual people, society collective­ly can also be quite cruel towards cats, especially ‘unwanted’ felines. For example, it was reported a few years ago that Surrey, B.C., had an estimated 36,000 feral cats, very many of which suffer severe malnourish­ment, debilitati­ng injury and/or infection.

Yet the municipal government, as well as aware yet uncaring residents, did little or nothing to help with the local non-profit Trap/Neuter/Release program, regardless of its (and others’) documented success in reducing the needlessly great suffering. And I was informed last autumn by Surrey Community Cat Foundation that, if anything, their “numbers would have increased, not decreased, in the last 5 years.”

It’s the only charity to which I’ve ever donated, in no small part because of the plentiful human callousnes­s towards the plight of those cats and the countless others elsewhere.

These include the cats I too-often learn about, whose owners have allowed to wander the neighbourh­ood at night only to be tortured to death by cat-haters procuring sick satisfacti­on...at age 54, I’ve long observed that higher human intelligen­ce is typically accompanie­d by a seemingly proportion­al reprehensi­ble potential for evil, or malice for malice’s sake.

I believe there’s a subconscio­us yet tragic human-nature propensity to perceive the value of life (sometimes even human life in regularly war-torn or overpopula­ted famine-stricken global regions) in relation to the conditions enjoyed or suffered by that life.

With the mindset of feline disposabil­ity, it might be: ‘Oh, there’s a lot more whence they came’.

I believe that this mentality, regardless of any alleged catshelter odours, prevails almost everywhere, though especially in Lethbridge and Surrey. Yet, these mammals’ qualities, especially their non-humanly innocence, make losing them such a great heart break for their owners.

Only when overpopula­tions of unwanted cats are greatly reduced in number by responsibl­e owners consistent­ly spaying/ neutering their felines might these beautiful animals’ presence be truly appreciate­d. Frank Sterle Jr.

White Rock, B.C.

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