04/21/2026
Community cats are not a “problem” to get rid of. They are living beings who have been abandoned, displaced, and let down by humans. They deserve kind, effective management.
Yet across the U.S., animal control agencies and shelters continue to round up healthy outdoor cats and kill them. This does not work. It does not reduce populations. It does not protect wildlife. They kill because old policies tell them to.
This must stop.
TNR (Trap‑Neuter‑Return) is the only method shown to:
- reduce outdoor cat populations humanely
- stabilize colonies without the vacuum effect
- prevent endless litters
- reduce shelter intake and euthanasia
- protect public health
- save taxpayer money
- support the caregivers who do what cities refuse to do
Every place that has adopted TNR sees the same results: fewer kittens born, fewer cats suffering, fewer cats entering shelters, and fewer cats dying. Killing ferals does nothing.
It doesn’t reduce numbers.
It doesn’t protect wildlife.
It doesn’t solve complaints.
It just creates a vacuum, invites new unsterilized cats in, and starts the cycle over again, with more death, more cost, and more cruelty.
**The United States needs one standard:**
TNR as the default, protected, nationwide policy.
No more feeding bans.
No more “nuisance” ordinances.
No more punishing caregivers.
No more rounding up cats to die in back rooms.
Community cats are a community responsibility, and killing them means the community has failed.
It’s time for every city, every county, and every state to stop hiding behind old policies and adopt the only kind, effective, science-supported approach: TNR. Everywhere. Now.