Close X
Friday, November 15, 2024
ADVT 
National

Changing Catty Attitude Towards Felines Key Goal Of Canadian Animal Shelters

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 31 Dec, 2015 12:14 PM
  • Changing Catty Attitude Towards Felines Key Goal Of Canadian Animal Shelters
There's a good chance that if Spot the dog gets lost after chasing that infernal squirrel through the park and ends up in a animal shelter, he'll eventually return to his master's loving arms.
 
But when Felix the cat fails to come back from his nightly rounds, odds are his owner won't see him again.
 
That's of concern to the Canadian Federation of Humane Societies.
 
The federation's annual report for 2014 shows 69 per cent of stray dogs taken in by humane societies or SPCAs that year were reunited with their guardians compared with 56 per cent in 2013.
 
For cats, however, the figure is significantly lower. Just five per cent get back home to purr on their front-window perch.
 
The report is based on 89 responses to a survey the federation sent to 168 humane societies and SPCAs across Canada between April and September 2015.
 
The federation says the data represents only a fraction of homeless companion animals in the country. Private shelters, rescue and foster groups and municipal animal services were not surveyed.
 
"There's a pervasive idea out there that, 'Well, the cat will come back' or, 'I'll just wait a week or two for it to return,'" said federation CEO Barbara Cartwright. "It's too late for the cat. They've been absolutely lost from their owner."
 
Canadians are steadily getting the message about responsible dog ownership and are ensuring their pooches have collars, tags, tattoos and microchips, Cartwright said. They also search for their pets if they go astray.
 
But it's a different story for felines.
 
 
"With cats, they're often not microchipped, are rarely collared and people don't look for them."
 
The stray-cat problem has been dogging shelters for years. The federation's report shows that over 85,000 cats and more than 38,000 dogs were taken in during 2014. Since 2001, there have been about twice as many cats transported to shelters as canines — a factor behind overcrowding in the facilities.
 
The number of cats euthanized in shelters also continued to be twice as high as the number of dogs put down, although overall figures were lower for both species than the previous two years.
 
But not all is gloom and doom in the kennels.
 
Nationally, 20 per cent fewer animals were taken in by shelters in 2014 compared with the year before. Staff noted that more strays had already been sterilized before their arrival.
 
Cartwright said there's no hard data to explain the lower intake, but she's optimistic that improved animal guardianship and better spay-neuter programs are behind it.
 
The slow but steady changes are heartening, but the federation executive notes that Canadians still have a lot of catching up to do when it comes to ensuring Felix stays home safe and sound.
 
"These are important evolutions in our understanding about how we can best care for cats, so that they're not being lost, they're not reproducing and creating such an over-population of cats that we see thousands being euthanized a year."

MORE National ARTICLES

Kathleen Wynne To Apologize For 1912 Regulation Banning French In Ontario Primary Schools

TORONTO — Premier Kathleen Wynne is willing to apologize to Ontario Francophones for a 1912 regulation that prohibited teachers in elementary schools from speaking with students in French.

Kathleen Wynne To Apologize For 1912 Regulation Banning French In Ontario Primary Schools

BMO Report Suggests Canadian Drivers Not Reaping Full Benefit Of Lower Oil

BMO Report Suggests Canadian Drivers Not Reaping Full Benefit Of Lower Oil
TORONTO — A report by the Bank of Montreal suggests Canadian drivers aren't reaping the full benefit of lower oil prices when it comes to prices at the pump.

BMO Report Suggests Canadian Drivers Not Reaping Full Benefit Of Lower Oil

A Year Of Tough Choices Ahead In Defence For Justin Trudeau's Liberals

A Year Of Tough Choices Ahead In Defence For Justin Trudeau's Liberals
 Harjit Sajjan, Canada's new defence minister, is uniquely qualified to know how Ottawa's abstract policy decisions can be bent, twisted and mangled in the far-flung corners of the globe — sometimes to the detriment of those in uniform.

A Year Of Tough Choices Ahead In Defence For Justin Trudeau's Liberals

Arvind Kejriwal Calls PM Modi a ‘Coward, Psychopath,’ After CBI Raid; BJP Hits Back

Arvind Kejriwal Calls PM Modi a ‘Coward, Psychopath,’ After CBI Raid; BJP Hits Back
Kejriwal said the CBI team was looking for a report of the inquiry commission that had probed, on his instructions, the affairs of the DDCA which he alleged was a den of corruption.

Arvind Kejriwal Calls PM Modi a ‘Coward, Psychopath,’ After CBI Raid; BJP Hits Back

BC Hydro Substation Fire Sending Black Smoke Into Air In Richmond, B.C.

BC Hydro Substation Fire Sending Black Smoke Into Air In Richmond, B.C.
Police say that air quality may be affected, in the area of No. 4 Rd. and River Rd.

BC Hydro Substation Fire Sending Black Smoke Into Air In Richmond, B.C.

B.C. Commits $3Milion To Improve Transportation Safety Along Highway Of Tears

The province has earmarked $500,000 to install webcams and transit shelters along Highway 16, a remote, northern route between Prince George and Prince Rupert.

B.C. Commits $3Milion To Improve Transportation Safety Along Highway Of Tears