raising the bar bringing tnr programs … the...raising the bar: bringing tnr programs from zero to...
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RAISING THE BAR:BRINGING TNR PROGRAMS FROM ZERO TO HERO
Stacy LeBaronMerrimack River Feline Rescue Society
animalsheltering.org/expo#AnimalCareExpo
Karen LittleAlley Cat Advocates
Thank you!!!
HSUS Animal Care Expo 2016
• HSUS Staff• Katie Lisnik, Director of Cat Protection and Policy
• Danielle Bays, Community Cat Program Manager
Shout Out to…..
• TNR Guru• Bryan Kortis, Neighborhood Cats
Today’s Presentation
• Zero to Hero • Alley Cat Advocates’ Story
• Zero to Hero• Merrimack River Feline Rescue Society’s Story
• Worksheet Scenarios
• Resources
Alley Cat Advocates Presentation Outline
• Introduction
• 4 Essential Ingredients
• 6 Awesome Programs
• Ultimate Result
• Resources
Introduction to Alley Cat Advocates
• In the beginning … Louisville
State of animal welfare
Our group
Introduction to Alley Cat Advocates
In the beginning … Louisville
State of animal welfare
Our group
Our goal “Making Louisville the safest city in the
country to be a community cat.”
Introduction to Alley Cat Advocates
In the beginning … Louisville
State of animal welfare
Our group
Our goal “Making Louisville the safest city in the
country to be a community cat.”
Our progress …
Scattered Satisfies immediate, short term needs
Direct contact with caretakers key
#1
Grassroots Support
• Targeted Satisfies immediate and strategic
long term needs
Impact on caretakers plus other stakeholders
#2
Targeted Support
Feralville
Community level
targeting
High
sterilization
rates in
targeted
colonies
+
Negate the
vacuum
effect
6Awesome Programs
BIG FIX and
Quick Fix
Medical Care
Program
Animal Control
Ride-Alongs
Animal Control Colony Alerts
Working Cat
Program
Shelter Neuter Return
Community support
Respect for both agencies
Conflict resolution
Trapping Partnership
#3
Animal Control
Ride-Alongs
“Operation City Kitty”
Return To Field
Stray/Confined
Combining SNR with TNR key
#6
Shelter Neuter Return
6Awesome Programs
BIG FIX and
Quick Fix
Medical Care
Program
Animal Control
Ride-Alongs
Animal Control Colony Alerts
Working Cat
Program
Shelter Neuter Return
Merrimack River Feline Rescue Society (MRFRS)Presentation Outline
• About MRFRS?
• Case 1: Newburyport
• Reaching out to other organizations
• Case 2: Lowell
• Mentoring and why we focus on targeted
Stacy LeBaron
Director of Mentoring
Merrimack River Feline Rescue Society
978-239-2090
About MRFRS
• Volunteer Based Organization
• Founded in 1992 as a TNR program along Newburyport waterfront
• 300 free-roaming cats & kittens were vetted, fed and sheltered
• The last cat passed away in 2009
• A successful, large scale TNR project
MRFRSMilestones
• 1996 Adopted out first
Feline Leukemia+ cat
• 2000 Free s/n clinic for ferals
• 2003 First Cageless Shelter
• 2008 First Catmobile hits the road
• 2011 Merged with FARS & SCFAW
• 2012 Second Catmobile hits the road
MRFRSMission
The MRFRS is a nationally recognized, nonprofit, volunteer-driven organization committed to ensuring the health and welfare of feral and domestic cats and kittens
by promoting proactive, compassionate, no-kill programs.
MRFRSPrograms
Adoption Program
Feral TNR Program
The Catmobiles
Foster Program
Sunday Spay/Neuter Clinics
The Captain Courageous Fund
FARS Program
The Bridge Program
Spay Mass Hotline
Mentoring Program
MRFRSSuccesses
OVER 105,000 SERVED!
20,000+ cats adopted
35,000+ feral cats s/n
50,000+ tame cats s/n
A “Kitten Free Zone”
MRFRSNewburyport Case Study
How we began
How decisions were made in the beginning (the kitchen table)
How policies and guidelines are made
Service area
No more cats, hard on the group
Why Targeted? Resource conversation at the
board level early on and the need for business support in the community.
Completion of a PetSmart Charities grant application for funding of a larger community
MRFRSLowellCase Study
2008 Traditional Humane Society
Low Cost spay/neuter clinic
Grassroots TNR group
Other partners
From 2009-2014: A 61% drop in intakes of cats and kittens
100% TNR is very important why?
Data collection; mapping
Total trapped from 2009 to now
MRFRSMentoring Program
Started in 2009
Worked with 67 groups and more
Focus on spay/neuter and target areas
Capacity Building
Current support by the Red Acre Foundation and past support by PetSmart Charities
Worksheet Scenario –Large Sized Community
Community Louisville Population: 740,000
Organization Alley Cat Advocates S/N capacity (annual): 4000
Free-roaming Cat Estimate: 8000 Population/20: 37,000 Reality: fewer than 37,000
Too big? Too small?
Year 6 = Stabilization and 90% shelter LLR
Worksheet Scenario –Medium Sized Community
Community Lowell Population 108,000
Organization MRFRS S/N capacity: 1000
Free-roaming Cat Estimate: 3000 Population/20: 5400 Reality: fewer than 5400
One wants to have capacity to fund and complete over 50% of cats in your target area
Too big? Too small?
Year 3 = Stabilization
Worksheet Scenario –Small Sized Community
Community Newburyport Population 17,800
Organization MRFRS S/N capacity: 200
Free-roaming Cat Estimate: 400 Population/20: 890 Reality: fewer than 890
One wants to have capacity to fund and complete over 50% of cats in your target area
Too big? Too small?
Year 6 = Stabilization and 100% TNR
Worksheet
Time Funds to be used:
Group Name:
EIN:
Address:
Contact person:
Phone:
Email:
Target Area: This is your town, city, county or zip code
Target Area Population: This is the human population
Target Area Population/20: This is the estimated free-roaming cat population.
Tribal knowledge estimate: This is your estimated free-roaming cat population based on your experience. If you don’t have experience and solid reasoning behind this number then don’t make a number up.
Total number of cats needing assistance: __________In order to have an impact you should be able to fund spay/neuters for 70% of the cats in the target area.
Budget Calculations(expense side):
Total amount needed for FRC Program: Total: _$______
Spay/neuter (should be total from below):_$______
Equipment (should be total from below):__$_______
Worksheet S/N Provider cost
S/N Provider #2 cost
S/N Provider #3cost
Ave cost per cat
Male
Female
# of cats to assist (50% m/f)
Ave cost Total cost
Free-roaming Cats
Owned Cats
Spay/neuter (surgery and rabies vaccination only) cost calculation. There most likely will be other medical costs associated with this program and they should be considered for the budget. *A possible free-roaming cat definition: Stray, Feral, Stray to own, Stray to shelter, owned indoor/outdoor. *Owned cats definition: Indoor only
WorksheetCost each Number requested Total
traps
Transfer cages
Drop Traps
Other -
In order to run a successful FRC program you need to consider what equipment you need to be successful. Equipment Funding Request (total from below):Will you be running a trap bank? Any other follow up questions?
WorksheetFunding Source Amount per cat Amount(net) Received/Committed
Grant XYZ $10,000 Received
Grant ABC $5,000 pending
Auction $10,000 Committed
Co-Pay for owned $20(x 400) $8,000 Committed
Wellness Event $1000 Committed
e-cards $1,000 Committed
Total $35,000
Income Side:
How will you fund this program?
Budget Template
Revenue Description Total
XYZ Grant Requested $18,400
ABC Grant Received 3,000
Donations Pending 2,500
Neighborhood Association Pending 500
Co-pay Fees (for owned cats) 100 cats x $30/cat 3,000
Other Fundraising 200
Total $27,600
Expense
S/N of Free Roaming Cats (Dr. Vet) 200 cats x $45/cat $9,000
S/N of Free Roaming Cats (ABC Clinic) 100 cats X $40/cat 4,000
S/N of Free Roaming Cats (XYZ Clinic) 100 cats x $45/cat 4,500
S/N of Owned Cats (Mobile Clinic) 100 cats x $75/cat 7,500
Emergency Vet Expenses 1,000
Project Coordinator Stipend 500
Transportation (Fuel) 200
Marketing and Outreach Printing, Ads 300
Equipment 10 traps x $50/trap 500
Shipping traps 100
Total $27,600
Net Income $ 0
ABC Organization
Free-Roaming Cat Project Budget
12-months (MM/DD/YY – MM/DD/YY)
Project Goal = Targeted spay/neuter of 500 cats (400 FRC and 100 owned/low income)
Location = Feralville, MA
Guides and Resources
Guides and Resources HSUS, Managing Community Cats:
A Guide for Municipal Leaders.
HSUS, Pets for Life: Community Outreach Toolkit
Kortis, B., Community TNR: Tactics and Tools,PetSmart Charities 2014
Kortis, B., Neighborhood Cats TNR Handbook: The Guide to Trap-Neuter-Return for the Feral Cat Caretaker (2nd ed.), Neighborhood Cats 2014
STACY LEBARON, DIRECTOR OF MENTORING
(978) 239-2090 [email protected]
animalsheltering.org/expo#AnimalCareExpo
KAREN LITTLE, EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR
(502) 634-8777 x8 [email protected]