Feral Paws Rescue

Saving Feral Cats

Organizations who Support Our Fight To Save The Feral Cats At Avenal State Prison

Listed below are organizations who stand behind Feral Paws Rescue!  Each has given their time and service to help fight for the feral cats at Avenal State Prison. Their services include veterinary services, writing letters, donations of food, helping to place the feral cats into loving homes, contacting newspapers... and just so much more. All of us at Feral Paws Rescue are very grateful to each and ever one of them.

KingsCanyon Veterinary Hospital

 

Dr. LeRoy LeBeuf  has been working with Feral Paws Rescue! Doing many of the spay and neuter of the feral cats from Avenal State Prison.

Dr. LeRoy LeBeuf

Owner and Veterinarian

Dr. LeBeuf is a 1958 graduate of UC-Davis and member of the CVMA and Central California VMA.

 

Founded in 1932, it has been the standing mission of Kings Canyon Veterinary Hospital to help your animal friends to lead the happiest, healthiest, and best lives possible.

We are proud members of the California Veterinary Medical Association and the Central California VMA. These organizations have recognized the quality of the care we are able to provide, and we hope that you will too.

You and your pets are always welcome at Kings Canyon Veterinary Hospital; we hope that you will join us sometime.

Please see our page on http://www.myvetonline.com/website/kingscanyon/ on this site.

Abby Pet Hospital Link

Abby Pet Hospital has just been outstanding in helping with the feral cats at Avenal State Prison! They have a special account set up for the Avenal Prison cats. For donations to help with the cost of medical needs that some of the cats made need. Once they are removed from Prison grounds. They have Spay and Neuter so many  of the cats at Avenal State Prison!

 

Please see our page on http://abbypethospital.com on this site.

Valley Animal Center

May 28, 2009
 
Dear Feral Paws Rescue,
 
Thank you for forwarding this very disturbing article about the current Warden at Avenal State Prison. The Valley Animal Center formerly known as the California Feline Foundation is composing a letter and will send to each person on the list.
 
I am also going to be contacting our contact at the ASPCA to see what she can do. The more letters and publicity this gets, hopefully we can put a stop to the inhumane trapping and killing of the feral cats at Avenal.
 
Thank you,
Kelly Joos
Director of Development
Valley Animal Center

Valley Animal Center
P.O. Box 706
Fresno, California 93712
(559) 233-8690 tel
(559) 233-3722 fax
 
We are their shelter; You are their future...Please include the Valley Animal Center in your estate planning.


Front Page Of The Fresno Bee Newspaper

 

Joyce Bicknell of Fresno holds Boo Boo, one of the cats she rescued at Avenal State Prison. Bicknell wants a "logical reason" for getting rid of a program that helped prison cats.

Mark Crosse / The Fresno Bee

Prison cat program declawed; fur flies

Avenal's feral felines were humanely trapped, neutered and freed.

AVENAL — For nearly two decades, Avenal State Prison has served as a home to a population other than inmates. Hundreds of feral cats pass through the grounds in the desolate foothills of western Kings County.About five years ago, prison staff and volunteers launched an effort to control the growing population, which peaked at more than 600 cats, through a trapping program known as trap-neuter-release, or TNR, at no cost to the prison.Cats were humanely trapped, taken to local veterinarians to be spayed or neutered and vaccinated. Adult cats were released back into the prison area while adoptable kittens were placed in homes. Cat advocates say it reduced the prison's cat population to between 100 and 200 cats.But seven months ago, prison officials halted the program, calling it unsuccessful. Local cat advocates are not happy and are pushing for a return of the program. The ongoing battle has attracted national attention. Alley Cat Allies, a Washington, D.C.-based organization that provides information on feral and stray cats, has tracked the Avenal issue on its Web site. Fresno resident Joyce Bicknell, a leading advocate for the Avenal cats, said she just wants a "logical reason" for getting rid of the program."It's good for the inmates. It's good for rodent control. And you're never going to get rid of them," she said. "It's a perfect environment for them."The prison covers 640 acres and is surrounded by dirt on three sides and sits along Highway 33. The medium-security facility houses about 7,500 inmates. Prison spokesman Lt. James Haley said officials don't have the time or resources to care for and control the cat population."It was a bigger issue than we could handle," he said. Prison officials decided to end the program in February because only four of 150 cats trapped in the past four to five months had markings on their ears — a sign they had been neutered, Haley said. "We're not believing it was too effective," he said.Prison officials decided to remove eight to 10 feeding stations — set up by volunteers — after being cited by the California Division of Occupational Safety and Health. According to the Cal OSHA report, a compliance officer inspected the facility in August 2005 and found the population-control program was "not fully instituted or evaluated to be effective."The prison received a $2,250 fine for three violations. Dean Fryer, a Cal OSHA spokesman, said the citation did not call for the abandonment of the program but that "better controls" were needed. Once the TNR program ended, volunteers and the prison came up with a new agreement. The prison traps cats and volunteers are allowed to pick them up at the prison. Haley said cats are held at the prison's firehouse. If volunteers can't get there by 4 p.m., they are taken to Avenal Animal Control for volunteers to pick up. Bicknell, who works with Feral Paws Rescue, the organization caring for the Avenal cats, said volunteers have received only a few calls in the last five months. Volunteers found a wounded kitten in May stuck in a trap, she said. The kitten's foot was caught under wire and it appeared to have tried to pull its leg free but caused a severe wound above its ankle, partially cutting off its limb. It was later adopted and is doing well. Bicknell said volunteers are unhappy with the cats ending up at Avenal Animal Control because it doesn't have cages for cats so trapped cats stay on the office's lawn until volunteers can pick them up. Bicknell said she would prefer the cats stay in cages at the prison — a fenced, safe environment. The California prison system does not have a policy on handling animal problems except that policies must be humane, said Brian Parriott, a spokesman with the California Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation. Individual facilities create policies to deal with specific problems. Most institutions have a few feral cats but Parriott said he was unaware of another facility in the state with a feral cat population as large as the one at Avenal. Other facilities across the United States use the TNR program, including correctional facilities in Montana and New York and the University of Central Florida. Ledy VanKavage, an attorney with American Society for Prevention of Cruelty to Animals, said TNR programs are the best way to handle a feral population. Reproduction and diseases among colonies are controlled. Cats remain territorial and don't allow new cats into the population. "TNR programs really, really do work to control the population," VanKavage said. No one is certain how the cats first came to the Avenal prison. Haley said cats have been around since the facility opened in January 1987. Bicknell, a retired California Feline Foundation employee, said the area is ideal for cats. There is plenty of dry, open space and mice. Avenal prison officials have seen fewer cats in recent months despite assertions by advocates the population is growing again, Haley said. He attributes part of the reduction to cats no longer depending on feeding stations. "These are feral cats ... they're used to being on their own," he said. Haley calls the ongoing battle over the TNR program "very frustrating." He has been flooded with e-mails and calls from cat supporters demanding the trapping program be reinstated. The prison was forced to create a new e-mail account for Haley because it was overwhelmed with messages regarding the cats, he said. Haley said he tries to explain that funding no longer is available. "Do you want your tax dollars spent on cats or do you want tax dollars spent on inmates?" he said. But Bicknell disagrees, saying funding is available through grants and donations and volunteers have veterinarians willing to help out. She said the program was a model for how to handle a feral cat population. "This whole program has been sent back to 2000," she said, referring to when cats ran rampant. Bicknell and other volunteers ultimately want the program reinstated. They're trying to draw local, state and national support. "The option before us is to get as much attention as possible," she said. Haley said the prison has done it's best to work with volunteers. "Everybody has sympathy for the situation," he said, "but we also have to look at the realities of the situation."

Miss Samples was an inmate's pet at Avenal State Prison. Hundreds of feral cats pass through the prison's grounds in western Kings County.

Mark Crosse / The Fresno Bee

The reporter can be reached at

Cat Defender

Dedicated to Defending Cats Against Exterminators, Sterilizers, Vivisectors, Mutilators, and Other Abusers.

Avenal State Prison Reverts to Its Old Aulirophobic Ways by Scrapping TNR Program and Cutting Off Cats' Food Supply


It is not part of the national agenda but at the local level there are only a handful of more contentious issues than homeless cats and, in particular, Trap, Neuter, and Return (TNR). Generally speaking, the battle lines are usually drawn with advocates of extermination, such as animal control officers, shelter operators, bird advocates, and wildlife proponents, on the one side and proponents of sterilized colonies on the opposing side.

With the notable exception of rural communities where they often find employment as mousers on farms and ranches (See Cat Defender post of February 21, 2006 entitled "Chairman Meow Finds a Home in a Barn and a Job as a Mouser on Texas Horse Ranch"), homeless cats are personae non gratae almost everywhere else.

Even though they are purposefully dumped there by uncaring students, they are certainly not welcome on college campuses (See Cat Defender posts of June 14, 2006 and September 11, 2006 entitled, respectively, "Kindhearted Dairyman, Sacked for Feeding Feral Cats, Files $20 Million Lawsuit Against Cornell University" and "Selfish and Brutal Eggheads at Central Michigan University Target Colony of Feral Cats for Defamation and Eradication") nor on military bases. The corporate world is hostile to them (See Cat Defender post of July 27, 2006 entitled "Northrop Grumann Plans to Exterminate a Colony of Feral Cats That Has Lived at Its Redondo Beach Facility for Twenty Years") as is the public sector (See Cat Defender post of October 20, 2005 entitled "After Ridding Ohio Statehouse of Rats, Cats Now Find Themselves Facing Eviction").

Private clubs do not want them (See Cat Defender post of January 19, 2006 entitled "Public Outcry Forces Army Navy Country Club to Scrap Plans to Exterminate Long-Term Resident Felines") and they are not even safe in abandoned buildings (See Cat Defender post of March 31, 2006 entitled "Idaho Humane Society Lends Its Support to the Demolition of a Derelict Seed Store That Claims the Lives of Dozens of Cats"). They are even denied safe harbor on beaches (See Cat Defender post of September 25, 2006 entitled "Photographer Captures the Beauty of Feral Cats That New Jersey Coastal Town is Hellbent on Exterminating") and faraway islands (See Cat Defender post of September 21, 2006 entitled "Aussies' Mass Extermination of Cats Opens the Door for Mice and Rabbits to Wreak Havoc on Macquarie").

Now comes word that they have worn out their welcome at Avenal State Prison (See photo above) even though hundreds of them have shared the grounds of the sprawling six-hundred-forty-acre facility with one-thousand employees and seventy-five-hundred medium-security inmates since it opened in January of 1987. In particular, a TNR program inaugurated in 2001 by the prison and outside volunteers was abruptly discontinued in February of this year allegedly because of its cost and ineffectiveness.

Under the original agreement, the cats were humanely trapped, desexed, and vaccinated. The adults were returned to the prison to work as mousers and to keep the inmates company while new homes were found for the kittens.

"It's good for the inmates. Its' good for rodent control," Joyce Bicknell (See photo above of her and Boo Boo), a retired employee of the California Feline Foundation who now works with Feral Paws Rescue, told The Fresno Bee on September 25th. (See "Prison Cat Program Declawed; Fur Flies.") "It's a perfect environment for them," she added in reference to the isolated, treeless, sun-baked lockup located eighty-nine kilometers south of Fresno at the foot of Kettleman Hills in Kings County.

James Haley, a spokesman for warden Kathy Mendoza-Powers (See mug shot below) gave several reasons for scrapping the initiative, known as the Star Project, and not surprisingly a lack of staff and money were at the top of his list. "Do you want your tax dollars spent on cats or do you want tax dollars spent on inmates?" he rhetorically asked The Fresno Bee in the article cited supra.

That charge was quickly rebutted by Bicknell who told the newspaper that not only was ample funding available through grants and donations but that veterinarians were also willing to provide their services either gratias or at reduced rates. In the past, Maddie's Fund has footed the bill for the sterilizations.

Haley also argued that the program was stopped because it was ineffective in controlling the feline population. In order to buttress his claim, he pointed out that only four out of one-hundred-fifty cats trapped during the last four to five months that the program was in place had been previously sterilized.

This assertion has also been rejected by Bicknell and her allies who claim that the colony, which originally numbered around six-hundred cats, has been reduced by between one-hundred and two-hundred cats through TNR. Alley Cat Allies, however, claims on its website that only about two-hundred cats remain out of an original population of five-hundred. Needless to say, without accurate before and after statistical data there is not any way to evaluate these conflicting claims.

The apparent ineffectiveness of the program could be attributable to there being more cats than previously inventoried or perhaps it is simply a matter of more time and effort being needed before the program bears fruit. Since the compound is surrounded by an electric fence that is sandwiched in between a double cyclone barrier topped with concertina wire, it is unlikely that any newcomers have gotten in to join the colony.

Although the point is moot as far as Avenal is concerned, TNR should not be judged solely by its efficacy in keeping out other feral cats. TNR eliminates the ability of sterilized cats to reproduce and that in and of itself reduces feline overpopulation. The fact that new cats may join a colony only means that trapping and sterilization must be an ongoing process. More importantly, homeless cats, like down-and-out individuals, must have somewhere to hang their hats.

More than likely TNR's death knell at Avenal was sounded in August of 2005 when the California Division of Occupational Safety and Health (OSHA) fined the prison $2,500 for three violations relating to its care of the cats. The report in The Fresno Bee does not specify the nature of these infractions but most likely they were related to safety and health concerns.

Cal OSHA's Dean Fryer told The Fresno Bee that the prison's TNR program was "not fully instituted or evaluated to be effective." He did not recommend, however, that it be abandoned, only that better controls were needed. Nonetheless, prison officials used this criticism and fine as the pretext for discontinuing TNR.

Tant pis, Avenal has also removed the eight to ten feeding stations inside the compound as the result of Cal OSHA's damning report. The report in The Fresno Bee does not broach the subject of what the cats are doing for sustenance nowadays but Haley callously dismissed such mundane concerns by saying, "These are feral cats... they're used to being on their own."

The dismantlement of the feeding stations has led to another disagreement between the contending parties with prison officials claiming that starving the cats to death has helped to reduce their population whereas cat advocates have countered by arguing that the number of cats is actually increasing.

Following the discontinuance of TNR, prison officials and the volunteers entered into an informal compact whereby the prison agreed to trap the cats and hold them until they are picked up by the volunteers. So far, however, this arrangement is not working out.

First of all, prison officials are not trapping very many felines and, secondly, they are turning over to Avenal Animal Control those few that they do snare if volunteers do not collect them before 4 p.m. Due to a lack of space at their shelter, Animal Control leaves the cats in their traps on its lawn until the volunteers collect them.

This has led to some cats being imprisoned in traps for as long as forty-eight hours without either food or water. Because of either their extended confinement or rough handling, many of these cats have been injured as the result of their ordeal. (See photo above of a bloody cat in a cage.)

The Fresno Bee does not delve into what happens to these cats but presumably the kittens are put up for adoption. The fate of the adults is a good deal more problematic. If they are not exterminated by either Animal Control or the prison, the volunteers must either socialize them and find new homes for them or find somewhere else to release them.

Several instances of feline cruelty have also been uncovered by Alley Cat Allies and the Star Project. For instance, a black cat (See photo above on the left) and her five kittens were recently discovered secured with duct tape inside a trash can. When rescuers finally arrived some eight hours later one kitten was near death.

In a shocking act of desecration that demonstrates not only the warden's contempt for cats but also her total lack of respect for the departed, a feline cemetery, meticulously maintained by the inmates, was ordered destroyed on March 28th of this year. (See photos above and below.)

The remains of more than one-hundred cats interred there were removed, wrapped in trash bags, and placed inside a box. Even Alley Cat Allies has been unable to determine what officials have done with them; more than likely they were tossed out with the garbage.

Malheursement, the recent events at Avenal mark a return to the prison's old atavistic, aulirophobic ways. Most notably, in November of 2002 prison officials deliberately sealed up alive about thirty-five cats underneath one of the buildings inside the compound. This barbaric act led to the deaths of more than two-dozen cats by starvation and dehydration. Rescuers were able to save a cat named Inmate (See photo below) and several others but most of the trapped cats died horrible deaths as their mummified remains vividly demonstrate. (See photo below.)

The California Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation (CDCR) does not have a comprehensive policy on dealing with cats and other animals that turn up at its institutions and consequently each facility is free to deal with them as it sees fit so long as it does so in a humane manner. Humane treatment, however, means different things to different people. For instance, most cat-haters consider extermination to be humane.

It is not known how widespread TNR programs are within the American penal system, but in addition to California they are also being tried at institutions in New York and Montana.

A world away in Cape Town, authorities recently announced that they are planning to transfer the feral cats who have been living on the grounds of Parliament to dreadful, maximum-security Pollsmoor Prison. (See The Pretoria News, September 15, 2006, "Parliament's 'Fat Cats' Off to Jail.")

While this is no doubt an ominous turn of events for the felines, it is nonetheless a big improvement over the South Africans' extermination campaigns at Nelson Mandela's old gulag on Robben Island. (See Cat Defender posts of March 23, 2006 and April 27, 2006 entitled, respectively, "South Africans, Supported by Ailurophobic PETA, Are Slaughtering More Cats on Robben Island" and "Cat-Hating Monster Les Underhill and Moneygrubbing Robben Island Museum Resume Slaughtering Cats in South Africa.")

Elsewhere in California, the Solano County Sheriff's Claybank Sentenced Detention Center, located sixty-two kilometers west of San Francisco, and the Blaine Street jail in Santa Cruz have instituted successful programs whereby female inmates serve as surrogate mothers to feral kittens. (See Cat Defender post of October 27, 2005 entitled "Inmates at Women's Prisons in California Save Lives by Fostering Feral Kittens.")

Under these innovative programs, the kittens have someone to care for them until they are old enough to be adopted while the inmates learn parenting skills, earn certificates of achievement, and receive reductions in their sentences. Most importantly, the program saves lives. It is a win-win situation for all concerned.

Contrary to the defamation campaign launched by officials at Avenal, most of the felines that Bicknell and others have had examined by veterinarians are healthy. Also, not all of them are feral.

Their presence has also had a humanizing effect on both staff and inmates. Over the years, caring employees have fed and watered the cats, bottle-fed kittens, and even smuggled out newborns. In addition to burying the cats and tending to their graves, inmates have also fed and helped to care for them. Some of them have even adopted cats.

For instance, Miss Samples, an eight-year-old black and white cat, was at one time the pet of lifer Louis Vigel (See photos below). "I call her Samples because once we had a lot of grasshoppers in here and she went around biting them in half, sampling them," he told The San Francisco Chronicle on September 9, 2001. (See "A Death Sentence Handed Down to a Prison Colony of Feral Felines Is Commuted to Life -- and Sterilization.")

It is not known if either Vigel or Miss Samples are still at Avenal but according to The Fresno Bee Miss Samples is definitely still alive.

The situation at Avenal is not ideal for the cats. As is the case with the inmates, there is no escape for them. Some of them also no doubt die horrible deaths by electrification on the high-voltage fence that surrounds the compound. This fence also claims a number of birds each year but yet the inveterate cat-haters at the National Audubon Society and the American Bird Conservancy are not calling for the heads of prison officials as they so often do for any cats caught dining on birds.

Also, since all of the cats are either black, gray, or black and white inbreeding may potentially cause genetic concerns down the road. These difficulties pale in comparison, however, to the ailurophobic behavior of prison officials which needs to be drastically amended.

Nonetheless, these cats need a place to live. The prison needs low-cost rodent control and the inmates and staff need feline companionship. Despite Haley's assertions, the care and maintenance of the cats does not cost the institution a cent; besides, with an annual budget of $98 million even the $2,500 fine from Cal OSHA is a drop in the bucket.

More to the point, Avenal has a moral responsibility to the cats. Because of its airtight security, the cats did not simply wander onto the grounds; au contraire, they were unquestionably brought in by prison officials to control the rodent population. The fact that they have multiplied so prolifically is the fault of the prison for not having instituted TNR a long time ago. For instance, between the prison's opening in 1987 and the introduction of TNR in 2001 the only feline population control practiced at Avenal was sporadic extermination.

Even though Avenal created the problem, Feral Paws Rescue and Alley Cat Allies are willing to correct the situation at no cost to the prison. Instead of thanking and cooperating with these dedicated animal welfare groups, prison officials have obstructed their efforts and reverted to their old barbaric ways.

The petit fait that the inmates at Avenal have enough compassion and bon sens to care for the cats whereas prison officials are capable of only denigrating and exterminating them presents a prima facie case that this nation needs to take a good hard look at exactly who it is that it is incarcerating.

America has more than two million individuals behind bars and this number is growing by eighty-three-thousand per month. Most of these individuals are either drug users or petty thieves who do not belong in the can; they need treatment and jobs that pay a living wage. As long as the prison-industrial complex is permitted to flourish, however, the jails will always be overflowing in this country. America has tons of money to spend locking up people in either jails or homeless shelters but not a sou for affordable housing, good jobs, or low-cost health care.

The scarce space at Avenal could be better utilized by the incarceration of inveterate cat-haters and abusers such as Mendoza-Powers. This space could also be used to house war criminals such as Bush and Olmert, crooked politicians, thieving capitalists, and polluters.

Photos:Kim Komenich of the San Francisco Chronicle (inmates with cat, Miss Samples with Louis Vigil, and Miss Samples by herself), The Fresno Bee (Joyce Bicknell and Boo Boo), CDCR (Kathy Mendoza-Powers), Avenal Prison Cat Rescue (injured cat in trap, Inmate, and mummified cats), Alley Cat Allies (black cat that survived trash can ordeal and feline graveyard).
 

Alley Cat Allies

            http://alleycat.org

     Alley Cat Allies is a HUGE!!!!!!! Supporter of Feral Paws Rescue Group!!!!! They have been apart of the TNR program back almost 7 years!  They are the reason for the TNR program that was started at Avenal State Prison 7 years back!  They are fighting in writting letters contacts goverment officals! Newspapers, Calling Avenal State Prison. Have alerts listed on their website about the treatment of the feral cats at Avenal State Prison.  They have stood beside Feral Paws Rescue from the start and are still fighting for our cause. We wont stop until TNR is reinstated and the feral cats at Avenal State Prison are out of harms way! Go to Alley cats website under Auction Alert and read about the Avenal State Prison feral cats! 

THANK YOU ALLEY CAT ALLIES FOR YOUR SUPPORT!!!!! OUTSTANDING JOB YOU HAVE DONE TO HELP US AT FERAL PAWS RESCUE!

 

Peta

http://peta.org

Peta has been a huge supporter of Feal Paws Rescue Group!  Has supported our cause on their website under auction alert! Have called and spoke to Avenal State Prison! Demanded that TNR be reinstated and feeding of the feral cats reinstated.Written letter and so much more in help with our cause to help the feral cats on Avenal State Prison grounds.  Peta is still working hard with Feral Paws Rescue to reinstate the TNR program at Avenal State Prison

Click here to return to PETA.org

Letter Written By Alley Cat Allies

We thank  Alley Cat Allies for all their support and effort to help us get the TNR reinstated.

                Institute humane management for feral cats at Avenal

I am appalled to learn that Avenal State Prison would trap and kill the feral cat colonies on the prison grounds, particularly when an effective, humane Trap-Neuter-Return (TNR) program has been in place for five years. I ask that you place a moratorium on the feeding ban and cat trapping that has been mandated by Warden Mendoza-Powers.

 
Cats have resided on the prison property since 1987. From April 2001 until the recent change in leadership, there was an effective TNR program in place endorsed by both past Wardens Joseph Huskey and Scott Rawers. Using volunteers from California Feline Foundation and volunteer prison staff and inmates, this TNR program trapped, sterilized, and vaccinated all the cats and returned them to the grounds where the inmates provided them with food, water, shelter and cleaned up after them. Because the cats were sterilized and managed, the population was stable and had slowly reduced from over 500 cats in 2001 to 200 cats this year. The cats were causing no problems.
 
The feeding ban, in addition to being exceedingly cruel, can be expected to cause problems. When cats are suddenly cut off from human feeding, they scavenge from garbage and any other source of sustenance, frequently becoming a real nuisance. If the cats are simply removed from the grounds, other, sexually intact cats will move in from surrounding areas to take advantage of whatever resources (garbage or other) are available. Even subsisting on a meager diet, the cats will reproduce at alarming rates. In addition, a trap-and-kill (or remove) scheme has to operate continuously, at considerable cost, and simply will not work. Cats breed far faster than we can kill them. They reproduce prolifically and will quickly form another colony. New cats have already begun to move onto the prison grounds and new kittens have been seen since TNR ceased. 
 
It is apparent that Warden Mendoza-Powers does not understand that she already has at hand the most effective way to reduce the feral cat population, and that she is not considering the cost to the prison system that constant removal of these cats would incur.  Trapping and killing costs about $100 per cat, which is an ongoing expenditure, while TNR usually costs less than half that amount and stabilizes the population.
 
Please consider the benefits that Trap-Neuter-Return (TNR) has already shown for the cats on Avenal State Prison grounds and require Warden Mendoza-Powers to reinstate the previous effective, low-cost, and humane management program. You may contact Alley Cat Allies for further information on this program and on Trap-Neuter-Return at alleycat@alleycat.org or 240-482-1980 or visit www.alleycat.org.

September 29, 2006 Letter Written By Humane Society of the United States Regarding Avenal State Prison Cats


In response to the article regarding the apparently now defunct feral cat program at Avenal State Prison (Prison cat program declawed; fur flies by Sarah Jimenez, Monday, September 25, 2006), properly managed feral cat programs do work. There are numerous successfully managed colonies throughout the United States and a good example is at the Sacramento Marina. In 2003, there were close to 300 cats and 150 or more skunks at the Marina ; now an occasional skunk is seen and the cat colony numbers no more than 30.

The Humane Society of the United States (HSUS) advocates community-based Trap-Neuter-Return (TNR) programs with on-going responsible management as the most viable, long-term approach available at this time to reduce feral cat populations. The goal of any feral cat management program is to stabilize and eventually eliminate the existing colony through attrition. The former Avenal Prison feral cat program was on its way to accomplishing that, although it appeared to be taking too long for some. Given the commitment of local volunteers and knowing that a well-managed TNR program will work new efforts at cooperation should be pursued. Simple trapping and removal is short term and the population at the Prison is likely to increase close to its original numbers.

The HSUS encourage all members of the community—citizens, veterinarians, animal shelters, wildlife advocates, policy makers, public health departments, businesses—to work together towards a goal of non-lethal approaches to feral cat management. Resources are available on our website at www.hsus.org/feralcats. 

Curt Ransom

Regional Program Manager
West Coast Regional Office
The Humane Society of the United States

 

Letter Sent to Department Of Corrections From Humane Society of the United States

February 17, 2006
      via email to Secretary@cdcr.ca.gov


Secretary Roderick Q. Hickman
Department of Corrections
1515 "S" St. Suite 502
Sacramento, CA 95814

Dear Secretary Hickman:

The Humane Society of the United States (HSUS), the nation’s largest animal protection organization, requests that you intervene to allow Trap-Neuter-Return (TNR) of the remaining homeless cats at Avenal State Prison.

Although removing the cats may provide a short-term reduction in their population, other homeless cats will move in to take advantage of the food and shelter, and you will be involved in an endless cycle of trapping and euthanizing – which will be costly financially and in terms of poor community relationships. In addition, the compassion that the inmates have shown for the cats is one that should be encouraged.

A Trap-Neuter-Return (TNR) program in which cats are spayed or neutered, vaccinated, ear tipped, and provided ongoing care is the most effective strategy currently available to reduce feral cat populations. The goal of any TNR program is to improve the quality of life for the homeless cats while reducing their numbers through adoption and attrition. The unsanitary conditions caused by their presence can be addressed with a variety of non-lethal strategies that I would be happy to discuss with you.

Please reverse the decision of the acting warden at Avenal State Prison and permit the cats to be TNR’d by the experienced local groups that have offered assistance.

Sincerely,

 

Nancy Peterson
Feral Cat Program Manager
The Humane Society of the United States
2100 L Street, NW
Washington, DC 20037
301-258-3129 (p)
301-258-3081 (f)
www.petsforlife.org

Humane Society of the US

http://www.hsus.org

The Humane Society has been a huge help in writing letters, contacting Avenal State Prison, and has supported our cause by reporting what has been taking place at Avenal State Prison regarding the feral cats. They have even tried to visit the prison grounds to check on the feral cats but were forbidden to do so by the wardens office.

HSUS For Feral Cats!

http://www.petsforlife.org

HSUS has supported Feral Paws Rescue by telling our story and cause to fight for the feral cats at Avenal State Prison on their web site!  Also has contacted the prison regarding their concerns of the treatment of the feral cats on prison grounds!

The No Kill Advocacy Center

http://www.nokilladvocacycenter.org/

The No kill Advocacy group has been a big part of the many agencies that support the Feral Paws Rescue group.  They have contacted the prison regarding the treatment of the feral cats on prison grounds, have written many letters,  and have posted information regarding our cause to reinstate the TNR program. 

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