Save Maui Cats

Save Maui Cats Save Maui Cats is a volunteer based rescue dedicated to Lahaina’s homeless, hungry and forgotten cats. We are a 501(c)(3) non-profit organization.

Visit SaveMauiCats.org to learn more or volunteer and donate. I have created this page to help my friend Michael Willinsky, who has spent the last decade of his life helping to save homeless cats in Maui. He's trapped, fixed, vetted hundreds of cats and kittens. He's exhausted, broke, physically compromised but still, he drives for hours, treks miles every night distributing 60+ pounds of

cat food to 20+ colonies of 300+ homeless/starving cats. He’s done this EVERY NIGHT for the past 10 years. The only time he’s left Maui in the last decade is to attend his father’s funeral. My hope is (with your help) to build a support network for him.

06/08/2026

SAVE THE DATE! 📅 Maui Humane Society and Greater Good Charities are teaming up to provide FREE, high-quality, high-volume spay and neuter surgeries for CATS from June 24–26.

🐱 Cats ONLY
Walk-in services will be available on a first-come, first-served basis. More details coming soon.

📍 Location: Maui Marketplace, Kahului
📅 Dates: June 24-26
⏰ Time: Stay tuned for details
📝 Registration Information: Coming soon

Mark your calendars and stay tuned for updates!

06/04/2026

Joaquin Phoenix has spent years using his voice to speak out for animals, and this quote captures a question many people are asking today.

When someone risks their freedom to save an animal from suffering, should they be treated like a criminal?

Around the world, animals are often seen as property before they are seen as living beings. In some cases, people who step in to rescue animals from neglect, abuse, or dangerous conditions can face legal consequences for their actions. That reality raises an important question about where our priorities truly lie.

Most of us believe helping those in need is the right thing to do. We teach children to protect the vulnerable and show compassion when others are suffering. Yet when that compassion is extended to animals, the response is not always the same.

Whether you agree with every act of animal rescue or not, it is worth asking why kindness can sometimes be punished while suffering continues behind closed doors.

Animals cannot speak for themselves. They depend on people willing to stand up when something is wrong.

Do you agree with Joaquin Phoenix?

Posting for a volunteer that sacrifices everything for decades to help, since the community doesn’t come through for her...
05/28/2026

Posting for a volunteer that sacrifices everything for decades to help, since the community doesn’t come through for her much and the paid professionals ignore her pleas for years. Please donate, like and share. Find Lily on FB for more info.

05/28/2026

People say community cats are "miserable outside" because it enables killing them. That’s the lie that continues to hurt cats. The truth, the documented and peer-reviewed truth, is that cats born outdoors do not suffer by default. They live the only lives they’ve ever known. When people help them through TNR, those lives become healthy, stable, and long.

Feral cats in managed colonies have health profiles that are almost the same as indoor pets.
Alley Cat Allies, 2016:https://www.alleycat.org/wp-content/uploads/2014/08/Feral-cat-health-analysis-2016.pdf

After TNR, their survival rates are comparable to those of owned cats.
Nutter et al., 2004:https://www.researchgate.net/profile/Michael-Stoskopf/publication/8175636_Reproductive-capacity-of-free-roaming_domestic_cats_and_kitten_survival_rate/links/0046352689075b33af000000/Reproductive-capacity-of-free-roaming-domestic-cats-and-kitten-survival-rate.pdf

Sterilized cats roam less, fight less, experience less stress, keep better body condition, and live longer.
Winograd summary + primary studies: https://www.nathanwinograd.com/the-life-of-a-wild-cat/

Cities that adopted TNR saw euthanasia rates drop by over 80%.
San José: https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC6437086/
Baltimore: https://faunalytics.org/three-years-six-shelters-72970-cats-the-tnvr-impact/
Jacksonville: https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC5946139/

This isn’t a debate. It’s backed by evidence.

The panic about wildlife? It’s built on computer models, worst-case scenarios, and double counting. Real scientists have dismantled it in peer-reviewed journals.
Fenimore et al., 2020: https://www.felineresearch.org/post/issue-brief-wildlife-impacts-of-outdoor-cats
Wolf & Schaffner, 2020: https://www.frontiersin.org/journals/veterinary-science/articles/10.3389/fvets.2018.00341/full

Outdoor ecosystems near people have already adjusted to cats. They have been part of the environment for centuries. Remove them, and you upset the balance. TNR helps maintain that balance.

So let’s be honest: the cruelty isn’t about letting outdoor cats live outdoors. The cruelty is in killing them because it’s easier than facing the truth.

This painting captures it simply: ERASE CAT KILLERS.
Not with violence; but with facts, compassion, TNR, and a refusal to let lies justify killing. We need laws everywhere that PROTECT community cats, and their caretakers.

Every cat spayed or neutered prevents suffering.
Every stabilized colony removes cruelty.
Every kitten rehabilitated and adopted out is a lifetime of love.
Every stray returned to life with a family is a happy ending.
Every supporter plays a role in keeping these cats alive.

If you want to see fewer cats suffering, fewer kittens born into hardship, fewer animals dying in shelters, and fewer excuses for killing: you should support TNR.

Additional peer-reviewed TNR research:
Levy et al. 2003: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/12523478/
Spehar & Wolf 2017: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/29088106/
Spehar & Wolf 2018: https://www.wellbeingintlstudiesrepository.org/aw_comp_globalcats_managementtnr/1/
Spehar & Wolf 2019: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/31597301/
Kreisler et al. 2019: https://www.wellbeingintlstudiesrepository.org/aw_comp_globalcats_managementtnr/16/
AVMA TNR Resource: https://avmajournals.avma.org/view/journals/javma/243/4/javma.243.4.502.xml
HSUS Outdoor Cats FAQ: https://www.humaneworld.org/en/resources/outdoor-cats-faq
ASPCA Community Cats: https://www.aspca.org/helping-shelters-people-pets/closer-look-community-cats

05/28/2026

By 1910, the United States Postal Service had roughly 200 cats on the federal payroll in New York City alone. They had a budget. They had a supervisor. One of them held a birthday party.

The cats were hired to kill the rats attracted to the glue used on envelopes and packages. At the General Post Office on Broadway, an 81-year-old postal clerk named George W. Cook held the unofficial title of Superintendent of Federal Cats.

He was given about $5 a month to buy calves' liver and lambs' kidney from a restaurant on Ann Street, which he served on clean white paper in four neat piles across the basement.

In 1904, the New York Times reported that George Cook threw a dinner party for 60 post office cats to celebrate his own 81st birthday. The menu was the same as every other day. The cats did not appear to notice it was a special occasion.

Address

PO Box 10723
Lahaina, HI
96761

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