CWS: A Look Ahead

Cat Welfare Society has had a solid month of fundraising with the LPN Cat Day at Suntec City, the Cat’s Night Out “In Search of the Most Beautiful Domestic Cat” at Jurong Point and that unforgettably tongue-in-cheek STrip “What’s New Pussycat?” campaign.

Besides raising funds for stray sterilisation, these light-hearted occasions gave us a rare chance to let our hair down with other cat groups, volunteers and with the public.

Now the fun is over, it is time to get back down to the serious business of cat welfare.


Engaging govt agencies

CWS is planning a series of engagements with AVA, HDB and Town Councils. And it cannot be timelier that Sunday Times dedicated a full page on animal welfare last weekend, giving voice to the poisoned bayshore cats, abandoned animals and tireless animal welfare volunteers.

(They had to juxtapose it with an article on our good friend Mr TTK to provide a perfunctory journalistic balance to the spread, but that is easily forgiven. A contrary article on a less controversial figure would have been more detrimental. So thank you, Sunday Times.)

Also featured in the full page coverage is a small victory for cat welfare. AVA has put it on record, “AVA… is again open to subsidising the cost of sterilisation of stray cats, if caregivers, town councils and communities are willing to participate.”

So our upcoming meeting with them can now fast track to the mechanics of the stray cat sterilisation scheme: what is required of town councils and volunteers, and how to streamline the scheme for greater success.

After which, we can start working with dedicated caregivers whose stray management work in their areas through Trap-Neuter-Release-Manage or TNRM, mediation and community building work has reached a healthy maturity. We will talk to their Town Councils first.

How you can help:
If you are a caregiver with a well managed cat community, come forward. Also start keeping records of the number of cats in your neighbourhood, the number of cats you have sterilised, your encounters with Town Councils and the number of complaints handled as these will go a long way when we engage them.

If your area does not have a TNRM programme, start one! Look out for our upcoming stray cat management workshop and meet-up on how to get started.


Sterilisation

CWS continues to single-mindedly put our funds into subsidising the sterilisation of stray cats. All our fundraising efforts are for this very purpose.

We get appeals from time to time to provide financial help for caregivers in need and for cat rescues. And this the committee members and volunteers do on our own personal basis.

The reason CWS funds are not diverted that way is this: The cold honest truth is that we have had to dig into our reserves last year to cover sterilisation and medical subsidies. And one had to go. It is a sign of the times that donations are down and reimbursements for subsidies are up.

We must keep stray cat sterilisation going simply because sterilisation makes the biggest impact to the welfare of our cats in the long run. It is this consistent, demanding, unglamourous work by dedicated caregivers and volunteers that provides a compelling reason for AVA to enter into a dialogue with cat welfare advocates. And we cannot afford to derail now.

The moment the government finally takes on the funding of stray cat sterilisation, that will really open up everyone’s resources to help the sick and suffering.

That moment is close and what will get us there is to make sure more community cats are sterilised and managed.

How you can help:
Start a TNRM programme in your neighbourhood. The next best thing is to sponsor a sterilisation!


Mediation

This is something that we struggle with immensely because we don’t have a full-time person in CWS. The committee members and volunteers handle our cases after hours or through phones and emails.

Mediation remains the most stressful, unrewarding part of cat welfare work. Being yelled at by irate people with cat pee on their slippers after a long day at work is not anyone’s idea of a fulfilling existence. But we still do it, together with our network of caregivers and volunteers because it goes hand in hand with TNRM. Stray management just doesn’t work without it.

What we find is that people come to CWS for a magic pill. And five after-hours dispensers to pill an entire nation is beyond ridiculous. We need more mediators.

It is a fact that Singaporeans hold an uncanny esteem for authority. People from an organisation are often seen as more respectable than someone from the neighbourhood. That is how Singaporeans work, so “I am from Cat Welfare Society” goes a long way. But anyone with the passion, a little gumption and knowledge can register with CWS and fulfill this role. And all the better if they are actual residents in the neighbourhood.

These resident mediators have their nose on the ground, they get to the problems quicker and they can better establish long term relationships with the Town Council officers and other residents. Town Councils can’t ignore them simply because they are residents, therefore constituents and more importantly, voters.

The magic pill? Don’t yell back and don’t wear your house clothes when mediating.

As much as mediation is daunting and completely thankless, just a word from you can save a cat from being caught and culled. If you are lucky, you can instill a little conscience in the neighbourhood, one cheesed off resident at a time.

How you can help:
If you want to be a mediator for your neighbourhood, register with CWS and contact your Town Council officer. Also look out for our upcoming stray cat management workshop and meet-up on how to get started.


Beyond CWS

If you have been following the posts and thread on the Cat Welfare Society’s Facebook page, you would have a good idea of the spectrum of cat welfare activities required to fully tackle an issue as broad as cat welfare.

There are the numerous appeals for medical fees for sick or injured cats, the many catteries and shelters in trouble in these tough economic times, cats and kittens that need fosterers and homes, AVA officers and Town Council officers to negotiate with and the unenlightened public to educate. As individuals, where do we start?

My own experience with the animalfamily is to start where your passion takes you. I started with the rescue and adoption of an old mangy toothless cat that stole my heart.

6 years on, the family has 10 cats at home, 40 cats fostered (and thankfully rehomed), hundreds sterilised and we dream of a cattery. We have seen cat shelters and their antithesis, cat hoarders and left a part of ourselves with each and everyone of these animals, the cheery ones, the sadly neglected, the dying and the dead.

Still, it is not enough. There must be a more sustainable solution to the plight of our cats, the kind that makes it less necessary to take cats off our streets for anything other than to loving homes. This will happen only when the responsibility for stray cat welfare is not just on caregivers but the entire nation. That is the prize worth working towards.



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Help, need more people to attend this meeting.

Hi Christina Goh,

I am an animal lover and a regular stray feeder in western part of Singapore.

I received the below sms from your residents staying in Jurong West St 81. For your information, I received over 50 sms from different people staying in your estate. I am very disappointed to realize that Town Council is still using this method to curb the cats.

There is some worries that I have over the way how the Town Council handled this issue. Why Town Council can not understand where our point of view come from?

a) Why is there a need to curb the cats?

b) Does Town Council bother to understand the nature of the cats before they decide to curb as Cats are territory animals?

c) What message does Town Council would convey to the residents staying in Jurong West in the Animals Welfare? Town Council encourages the abuse of animals?

d) The salary of all Town Council staff are paid from the tax payer's hard earned money? Do they seek the opinion of the public or do they play the role of dictatorship?

e) Being a stray feeder is not illegible and feeding stray animals is not illegible. If it is illegible, which chapter and acts are we looking at?

f) Does Town Council understand why we need to feed stray animals?

g) Does Town Council ever consider that we as a stray feeder also contribute to the economy of Singapore in terms of buying?

h) I know Town Council has lost a huge sum of money in investment in Lehman Brothers. Why not use the money to support animal welfare indirectly support Singapore Economy?

i) Town Council has a pool of talented Staff and they cannot come up with a win win situation?

j) Town Council does not sense an air of resentment going up with the public and Town Council forgets that the members of public are getting more and more educated?

I know you may not reply my email. But your answer matters to me as it will definitely determine my vote for the present government because the present government does not understand the needs of the present society and the present government has absolutely no understanding towards animal welfare despite of recent promotions of protecting the environment. Are not cats belong to the environment?

Best regards

Lim Zhen Ru, Josephine

NRIC: S7531131A

Contact Number: 94888784

c.c: Ms Ding from Editorial Department

Below is the content of the sms:

"

Dear all animal lovers,

We are the residents staying in Jurong West St 81, SINGAPORE. Recently the town council (in charge of maintenance of property) at our area is exterminating all cats. Their aim is to achieve ZERO CATS in the estate as as proof that they are effective team.

We tried to negotiate but our voices and appeals were not heard. We tried to locate our cats but they asked us to forget about it and this event was over. The Town Council did not send the captured cats to relevant authorities which are Agri-Food & Veterinary Authority of Singapore and SPCA, but some unknown areas which they refuse to reveal.

We suspect they might had been killed by the Pest Control Team. Thus, We will be meeting the Member of Parliament. The location is Jurong West St 91, Blk 953 #01-603, meeting time: 7.30pm 14/7/09

We are appealing for the cat lovers all over Singapore and the World to lend us your support by attending the meeting and to get more signatures or click. We need more people or signatures or click to demonstrate that this is a serious matter.

Course of action we are looking at:
1) Stop unnecessary culling of cats.
2) The location of the captured cats being disposed to.
3) The Authority recognises the right of the animals
4) Supports the program of Sterilisation

Please attend the meeting if you can and to those overseas animal lovers, please support this program

Thank you for your consideration."

Meeting with Town Council

I would love to attend this meeting as I'm sharing the same concerns due to the cat exterminating issues that takes place at my neighbourhood. Which we are within the same neighbourhood. Oh gosh, but I just got this message only this morning, 15/07/09 @0850hrs.

May I know the outcome of the meeting? Did the outcome favour our feline friends?

Cat Feeding Ground

OK, Thank you very much for the guide.

Very useful info. Hope to see

Very useful info. Hope to see more posts soon!

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Cat Feeding Ground

My feeding times are between 7.00-7.30am and 5.30-6.00pm or 8.00-8.30pm.

My location is at Jurong West Blk 978-979-980. Some of the cats actually waited at that feeding grounds in the mornings & evenings for their feeds.

But it saddened me to see the cleaner sweeping the food away even before the cats are finish, despite numerous reminders.

Would you be able to help to ask my Town Council on this matter? Thanks!

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Cat Feeding Ground

We recommend that residents make the first contact with your Town Council officer by emailing them with necessary details and cc-ing CWS. The TC officer can then be made directly responsible for a request from one of his constituents. CWS will then follow up with the necessary support to your request.

In this way, the TC officer would be more convinced that someone will clean up responsibly after each feedings if they ask the cleaner not to. If it is just a CWS request, they can easily challenge that we would not be there personally to ensure that the feedings are cleaned up.

Thanks for the post. Keep the

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Cat Feeding Ground

There's a group of stray cats around my neigbourhood that I'm feeding. However, even before the cats finished their food and drink, the cleaner clear it away. I've told him many times that I will do the cleaning myself however he still refused to listen.

Pls help.

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Cat Feeding Ground

What time do you feed? The cleaners are often off-duty in the evenings and therefore that might be a good time to feed. Also, that is the time when there is less human traffic.

If you speak to the Town Council, you may be able to get an understanding like some of our volunteers to allow feeding to take place within a 1 or 2 hour time frame, after which, you will come back and clear all the remnants.

Appreciate the info, it’s

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