This group is for 19th Ward residents who are concerned about the plight of stray, feral, and abandoned cats in our neighborhood. It is our goal to live in a community where all cats are treated humanely and cats and humans live in harmony.
Location: Rochester
Members: 41
Latest Activity: Aug 5, 2021
Please check out our Facebook page:
http://www.facebook.com/#!/groups/19thWardCommunityCats/
That is where most of our communication is happening right now. You may also contact us via the 19th Ward Community Association at 328-6571 to get on our email list.
19th Ward Community Cats was hard at work in 2015!!! In 2015, we were able to spay/neuter 287 free roaming cats in the 19th Ward as part of the City Kitty project. They were also vaccinated, and treated for fleas, worms, and parasites. That's 287 outdoor cats who've received vet care and will no longer be reproducing on our streets or be vulnerable to disease! Approximately 80 of those cats/kittens were placed for adoption with our City Kitty partner, Four-Legged Friends Animal Adoptions, Inc., and they're now in loving forever homes- off the streets entirely! Members of this group and colony caretakers volunteer their time and bear the financial burden for much of this work. If you'd like make a financial contribution to this group please take or mail your donation to the 19th Ward Community Association Office, 216 Thurston Road. Every dollar is spent on vet care for our community cats. If you'd like to help in any other way, please let us know! Thank you!!
Started by Kathleen M. Glennon Aug 1, 2015. 0 Replies 0 Likes
Comment
Very nice!
Hooray!
Kudos to you all! Every time I drive by Judy's on GPB I look for kitties, with fond memories of our evening there. And I love the "education" ideas!
Way to go Sheri, Robin and Kristi!!
For those who don't know how time consuming this can be..... the Marlborough 3 have given up at least 10 (probably MUCH more) full evenings and several weekend afternoons since starting just this one project on GPB. They have not only spent time trapping but have helped with education, transportation, building of traps, etc. They have done this to assist their neighbors (and the cats). There are some in our neighborhood who are critical of these efforts - probably because they either don't understand the importance of this issue and/or think doing for 'animals' is somehow less important than doing for people. The nice thing about the 'cat group' is that it is helpful to both animals AND people and it helps connect people (through their common interests) to others that they might not otherwise know.
Hooray! Go you guys!
Thanks Alice and Sheri and everybody! Sorry that the Citizens' Police Academy is on Tuesdays, and that I had to miss the meeting.
Hi all!
We had a good meeting last night, with three people from the Marlborough Group able to offer good advice on cat-catching!
We decided to purchase three new traps with part of the funds we have collected for TNR. Two of these will be have-a-heart type traps with one end that can be set to fall in place when it is triggered while the other end can be manually raised and lowered “guillotine” style to make it easier to get cats safely in and out of the trap. The third trap will be a special “drop trap,” which is much larger and is triggered manually (a watcher pulls a rope when the right cats are inside) and can trap multiple cats all at once. It also has an opening that can be used with the guillotine end of a regular trap to get cats transferred in and out. This combination will make it much easier to catch those last shy holdouts in a colony! And the fact that they belong to the whole group will simplify the coordination of cat trapping, at least for small numbers, though we will also need to continue our current very helpful communal practice of individuals loaning their personal traps as needed for larger groups. Sheri Tehan will coordinate the trap purchase.
Sheri will also be spearheading a neighborhood education campaign which will be three-pronged: seeing about getting billboard space and continuing to put news in 19th Ward newsletter, Loc19 and our own 19thwardcats.org web site; putting up posters in local business and other gathering places (YMCA, etc.); and going house to house both meeting neighbors and looking for evidence of cat colonies (mostly signalled by feeding dishes on porches…). Sheri will try to find the owners of local billboards like the one on Chili by 490 to see about costs and whether they offer pro bono service to groups like ours. She will also look into organizations, including the NET offices (by any more recent name) and our own 19WCA, that might help with making copies of posters or literature, though there are also some very good pamphlets and door hangers available from Alley Cat Allies and other larger groups.
We had a good discussion of some of the challenges facing cat caretakers, including Heidi getting out earlier than usual one morning to discover two young cats she had never seen (since they are early risers) and therefore not yet nabbed for TNR on her block, the fact that the Habitat and Lollypop feral TNR programs are both once again backlogged, and the difficutlies that keeping a cat colony can cause with one’s neighbors.
We do still have funds for TNR (Trap Neuter Return for feral cats) and will continue to work to hook up with people caring for cats in the neighborhood. TNR is of primary importance for keeping colony size under control, so we will need to work as best we can with the current clinic backlog. The coming winter weather will also complicate TNR efforts since cats need at least 24 hours recuperation time in a warm place – but the stress of winter will also put off most new litters until spring. We have decided that part of the education campaign will include using this winter time to identify colonies and get ready for a big TNR effort in early spring.
We also discussed the situation of shelters for cats, and came to the conclusion that most of the “nice” (to our eyes) shelters that we have built have gone unused (at lesast by cats), so that for the moment our efforts are better concentrated on getting ourselves organized and colonies identified, and letting the cats take care of finding shelter that is to their taste, since they mostly seem able to do so. If anyone does see cats who do not seem able to find adequate shelter, though, please report this (either on Loc19 or at www.19thwardcats.org).
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These links plus others can also be found under the Links tab.
ABOUT THE 19TH WARD
19th Ward Community Association
Rochester City Living
RocWiki.org
ANIMAL RELATED SERVICES
To report animal cruelty, call 911 or THE ANIMAL CRUELTY HOTLINE: (585) 223-6500
City of Rochester Low-income Spay/Neuter for pet Dogs and Cats
Rochester Community Animal Clinic - low-income spay/neuter for pet dogs and cats, and feral cats
PAWS, Inc.Providing Animal Welfare Services
City of Rochester Adopt a Dog or Cat
Lollypop Farm, The Humane Society of Rochester and Monroe County
BUYING A HOME IN THE 19TH WARD
City of Rochester Property Information
Zillow listed homes for sale
COMMUNITY LINKS
John Lightfoot, Monroe County Legislator,District 25
Loretta Scott, City Council President, At Large
LaShay D. Harris, South District
SouthWest Tribune
Sector 4 Comm. Developmant Corp
WDKX Urban contemporary 103.9 FM
WRUR 88.5 UR and WXXI partnership 88.5 FM
EDUCATION
FAITH COMMUNITY
BUSINESSES
El Latino Restaurant
D and L Groceries
Hand Crafted Wrought Iron
Jim Dalberth Sports
Menezes Pizza
TOPS Friendly Markets
Staybridge Suites
OUTREACH AND SERVICES
Coalition to Prevent Lead Poisoning (CPLP)
Dealing with Lead
Drug Activity
Healthy Blocks
HEAP NY Home Heating Assistant
Home Safety Tips LifeTimesAdultDay Health Care
Medicare
NeighborWorks Rochester
Parking / Abandoned Vehicles
2-1-1 Social Services
ACT Rochester
OTHER
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