The Chronicle (UK)

KITTY CAFE OWNERS HOPING TO REACH 100TH ADOPTION

- By DANIEL HALL Reporter daniel.hall01@reachplc.com

A NORTH Tyneside cat cafe says that its vet bills “are going to kill us” amid the seemingly never-ending cost of living crisis.

The Bad Cat Cafe opened in Wallsend in August 2022 and has rehomed 87 cats in that time, 15 of those in the first four months of 2022.

Many of the cats come from shelters in other parts of the country and even from abroad – and its owners hope to reach their 100th adoption in the coming months.

However, the cafe’s owners Tasmin Hirst and Roxanne Scott, who run the cafe alongside working full-time jobs, are really feeling the squeeze with their vet bills rising again.

They are now facing bills of £140 to neuter and microchip male cats, and £170 for females to be spayed and microchipp­ed.

This is higher than the cafe’s adoption fee of £130, which includes vaccinatio­ns, microchipp­ing, neutering/ spaying and flea and worm treatments.

At the moment, seven cats are awaiting treatment and Tasmin says she “doesn’t know where the money is coming from.”

She told The Chronicle: “We have really big plans for this place but we opened at such a bad time, as prices were going up and people couldn’t afford to do anything any more.

“We’re stuck in a rut and we daren’t put our prices up because people don’t understand why they have to pay admission and things like that.”

The cafe recently registered as a community interest company, in the hope it would open them up to more grants.

They have also tried quiz nights, fundraiser­s, and car boot sales but these have proven no more fruitful than getting a few customers through the doors of the cafe

Tasmin hopes that the grants they may be able to apply for could be a long-term solution, but for now, they have been left relying on adoption fees, cafe visitors, and regular and oneoff donations.

They have also had to occasional­ly launch fundraisin­g pages for vet treatment for particular cats – such as Dolores, who was in another shelter for two-and-a-half years and needs to have her teeth removed.

Tasmin finished: “We don’t just want to take the really easy-to-adopt cats, we take some hard cases too. We don’t take any money out of the cafe, and we know we’ll continue even if we have to cut down on the amount of cats we take in.

“The cats take a lot of work, and we put time into it as well as money. We’re grateful to the people who support us but at the minute it’s a massive struggle.”

 ?? ?? Tasmin Hirst, left, and Roxanne Scott, who run The Bad Cat Cafe in Wallsend
Tasmin Hirst, left, and Roxanne Scott, who run The Bad Cat Cafe in Wallsend

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