Toronto's cat population booming
Humane Society dropping adoption fees
The Canadian Press
Posted: Nov 3, 2012 10:11 AM ET
Last Updated: Nov 3, 2012 2:23 PM ET
The Humane Society is dropping its adoption fees. (Chris Young/Canadian Press)
Related
External Links
(Note:CBC does not endorse and is not responsible for the content of external links.)
A warm spring led to a boom in Toronto's cat population and now more of them than usual are roaming the streets, pushing the city's animal shelters over capacity.
As many as 300,000 cats are on Toronto's streets, said Barbara Steinhoff with the Toronto Humane Society. In a given year there are between 100,000 and 300,000 cats without homes and this year it's at the extreme high end of that range, she said.
"Through the spring and summer, with the warm weather, the cats had one more birthing period than we would normally see," she said.
"So we saw a huge influx of kittens coming into the shelter over the summer period."
The city's shelters are full — but still accepting dozens more cats each day — and so are foster homes.
Two Toronto shelters are slashing adoption fees to try to encourage more people to give a cat a home.
The Humane Society is cutting its price, which ranges from $60 to $120, in half during November and Toronto Animal Services is dropping its fee from $75 to $25 for the first four days of the month.
The latter promotion, which also ran for three days in October, has helped create room for more cats in the city's four shelters, said Mary Lou Leiher of Toronto Animal Services.
Awareness, and not necessarily more shelters, will help decrease the number of homeless cats in Toronto, said Leiher.
"Building more shelters is almost like a Band-Aid," Leiher said. "We really need to focus on our education programs so that people are spaying and neutering their cat and keeping them supervised."
Other programs saw $5 discounts for the adoption of black or orange cats in anticipation of Halloween, while June was adopt-a-shelter-cat month for Animal Services, which typically offers four cat adoption initiatives a year.
And in May 2010, both Animal Services and the Humane Society helped form a 10-organization partnership called the Toronto Feral Cat Coalition.
The volunteer-run coalition practices a trap-neuter-return approach, which humanely captures, neuters and immunizes feral and homeless cats before returning them to their colonies.
The method is used worldwide, and an Italian study of the approach from 2006 discovered it decreased feral colony sizes by up to 32 per cent after six years of trap-neuter-return implementation.
The study, however, echoed Leiher's call for education, pointing out that the number of abandoned, unneutered domestic cats often offset any reductions in colony size.
"This suggests," the study reads, "that all these efforts without an effective education of people to control the reproduction of house cats (as a prevention for abandonment) are a waste of money, time and energy."
Share Tools
Latest Toronto News Headlines
- Giorgio Mammoliti faces questions over $5,000-a-table event
- Toronto councillor Giorgio Mammoliti is facing new allegations after CBC News learned he was involved in a $5,000-a-table fundraiser in Woodbridge last night. more »
- Texting during movie lands complainant in trouble
- A Toronto woman found herself in trouble with the police after repeatedly asking a man in a cinema to turn off his cellphone more »
- Blue Jays host Orioles in bid to catch up in AL East
- The Toronto Blue Jays, winners in five of their last six home games, host yet another division rival in the Baltimore Orioles in the opener of a four-game series beginning Thursday night. more »
- Ford could survive crack video allegations, PR expert says
- Rob Ford needs to confess quickly or aggressively deny allegations of him smoking crack in order to politically survive, says a top Toronto political strategist. more »
Must Watch
Top News Headlines
- Toronto Mayor Rob Ford fires chief of staff
- A week after bombshell allegations that Toronto Mayor Rob ford was videotaped smoking crack, the mayor's chief of staff was fired and Ford is continuing to stonewall reporters. more »
- 2nd suspect in Tim Bosma murder case to plead not guilty
- The lawyer for Mark Smich says the Oakville, Ont., resident will plead not guilty to first-degree murder in the death of Tim Bosma, the Hamilton man who disappeared earlier this month after taking two men on a test drive of his truck. more »
- SNC-Lavalin letter says Gadhafi son offered VP post: RCMP
- SNC-Lavalin's ties to Libya's former dictatorship ran so deep the company offered the son of Moammar Gadhafi a six-figure job as a vice president in 2008, according to a newly unsealed RCMP affidavit. more »
- Federal Court won't remove MPs over robocall allegations
- The Federal Court says it won't throw six MPs out of seats over allegations of widespread vote suppression through automated robocalls in the 2011 federal election. more »
- Toronto Mayor Rob Ford fires chief of staff
- Rob Ford fired as Don Bosco Eagles football coach
- Mayor Rob Ford stays silent while brother defends him
- Body found in Lake Ontario near Toronto's Queen's Quay
- Police recover purse of woman who died on subway
- Jimmy Kimmel, Jon Stewart crack jokes about Rob Ford
- Ford could survive crack video allegations, PR expert says
- Tornado touches down in Ontario town
- 2nd suspect in Tim Bosma murder case to plead not guilty


Toronto traffic with Joan Chang