rescuing cats from the euthanasia list
DESCRIPTION
Presented at the American Pets Alive No-Kill Conference 2014.TRANSCRIPT
Rescuing Cats From the
Euthanasia List – A How To
Guide
Dr Frances Flower22 Feb 2014
APA! Cat Rescue:Then & Now
• Where we started
• Current state of play
• Cat stats
Two evaluators covering 7 days a week
~20-30 cats/kittens each night on the list
Limited ability to work on cats on the list (only a small number)
To rely entirely on foster group ~20
In late 2008 we had…
No-kill shelter 5 evaluators 5-20 cats/kittens on the list (still given
deadlines) Ability to work on every cat on the list Large foster base (~145) and cattery space at
multiple locations Additional programs for special cats (FeLv Ward,
Ringworm Ward, feral enclosure)
….in 2014 we have:
Series10
500
1000
1500
2000
2500
3000# cats saved
YEAR
2008
2013
2012
2011
2010
2009
40
1948
2848
1399
1528
779
APA! Cat Rescue:Getting Started
• Organization
• Liaising with shelter
• Internal communication
Current APA! Organization
Shelter Rescue
Foster
Bottle BabyBarn
Placement
Cattery
FeLV+ Ward
Ringworm Ward
New Organization
Shelter Rescue
Foster
Bottle BabyBarn
Placement
Cattery
FeLV+ Ward
Ringworm Ward
Set up Communication with Shelter Establish access to the shelter’s euthanasia list Understand how that list works Develop your program’s process Set up liaison person Provide shelter with up to 3 approved people to
confirm on cats
Set Up Your Program Communication
Determine a Rescue Lead and who they will liaise with
Create email rescue alias Emergency phone list Develop format for reporting evaluations Google calendar for rescue Set ground rules for rescue
APA! Cat Rescue:Working the List• Typical cats on list
• Evaluating cats
• Useful tools
• Reporting
• Choosing cats for your program
Types of cats on the list: behaviour Litter-box issues Aggression Rough players Quick to arouse Hard to handle Terrified cats Withdrawn cats Protective
nursing mums Unsocialised
kittens
Types of cats on the list: medical Injuries Chronic medical
issue Ringworm Felv+ FIV+ URI
Other Factors that Influence the List
Kitten season Hoarding cases Disease outbreak Holidays Natural disaster
Evaluating cats - OUTLINE Collect euthanasia list from
shelter Determine order of evaluations Review notes by
shelter/owner/previous evaluations Observe cat in kennel before opening Assess behaviour & personality Assess cat condition Submit cat ‘holds’ to shelter
Evaluating cats - BEHAVIOUR
bold / confident / withdrawn / shy / scared / aggressive / relaxed / affectionate / indifferent
On approach does he..
Get up to greet?
Stay in place?
Tries to escape or hide?
Adjust body position?
Response to Touch
Lets you touch?
Touch head only?
Touch all over?
Any sensitive areas?
Vocalise Chatty? Growling? Yowling? Crying?Handling Can you
pick up easily?
Struggling on pick up?
Not comfortable picking up?
Signs of stress/threat
Lip licking? Hissing? Swatting? Lunging? Attempt to bite?
Positive behaviours
Purring? Elevator butt?
Making biscuits?
Slow blinking?
Cheek/chin rubbing?
Evaluating cats - MEDICALEars, eyes, nose
Any discharge?
Sneezing? Itchy ears? Hot ears?
Dry nose?
Body condition
Emaciated? Skinny? Normal? Heavy set?
Obese?
Coat Dull and dry or flaky?
Any hairloss? Glossy? Matted?
Appetite Eating food? Food preference?
Social eater?
Litterbox use
Using litterbox?
BM’s normal? Diarrhoea?
Drinking Excessive drinking?
Pain behaviour?
Coat fluffed up? Reluctant to move?
Tail tucked, shoulders hunched and all four feet tucked under?
Lying prostate? Unresponsive?
Evaluator’s Toolkit Notebook Camera (no flash) Smartphone Straw toys Feliway Woolen gloves Wet food
Remember while you are there…. Chance to help potential
adopters see cats at the shelter
Opportunity to start socialising kittens
Evaluating cats – WRAP UP Make notes on your observations Take photos Report any concerns to staff Return to staff desk and put a ‘hold’
on the cats you can help Name ‘no name’ cats if allowed Ask for a kennel count if possible
From home, write report and submit to your rescue alias
Reporting Evaluations
• Assess suitability for your program
Reporting Evaluations
• Call out impt info
Reporting Evaluations
• Use photos for initial marketing• Use evals/abbreviated version for pleaing to
foster
Choosing Cats for Your ProgramQuestions to ask yourself: What space do I have available? Is my current cat population varied enough?
Do I have a good mix of age, colour, coat length, breed or am I heavy loaded with a particular group of cats?
How many adoptions will we have this week? This month?
Are we expecting a large influx of cats at the shelter in the next month?
Choosing Cats for Your ProgramBreak down the list Determine which cats you think could bring into your
program
Of those cats, number them in terms of order of saving. You are looking for FAST adoptions. Consider your priorities as: Kittens over adults Litters or pairs over individuals (= more lives saved) Highly desirable features/traits (Siamese, Persian, Maine
Coon, declawed, polydactyl, manx, three-legged, one-eyed) Healthy over sick
Of the cats you decide not to bring into your program: plea for adopters on CL
Working Example
VIOLET, 1yr & 6 nursing kittens
WALTER & WILLY, 5yr, shy
KENZIE, 5yr, Siamese, vomiting
ANTHONY, 4yr, FIV+
Working Example
VIOLET, 1yr & 6 nursing kittens
WALTER & WILLY, 5yr, shy
KENZIE, 5yr, Siamese, vomiting
ANTHONY, 4yr, FIV+
1
23
4
Never an easy job but you want to make smart choices:
- know your program ‘cat inventory’
- know your limiting resources
- pick cats for FAST adoptions
- FAST adoptions = more lives saved!!
APA! Cat Rescue:Other Ways Out
• Lost cats
• Original owners
• Other rescue partners
• Requesting re-evaluation
• Craigslist
Think outside the box….Stray cats- Is there signs of having a collar?- Is their coat in good condition?- Are they declawed?
- Check on craigslist lost &found- Check to see which area they were found at
and post a CL with that neighborhood in subject line
- If you are part of that neighborhood, send an email to the listserv/neighborhood watch group
Think outside the box….Owner surrendered cats- Contact owner (by phone) and tell them the cat
is at risk.
- Sometimes owners cannot afford treatment or are having financial difficulties – any assistance programs?
- If owner is not willing to reclaim, see if you can gain more insight how that cat was in the home.
Post on Craigslist for Potential Adopters• Needs to grab attention • Make sure cat has a NAME!• List key, unique features • e.g. DECLAW, MANX, SNOWWHITE,
SIAMESE• Give important information – the cat’s ID,
any deadline and where the cat is
• If this is a cat that your Program may bring in, posting on CL is also a good place to recruit a new foster. List that option in the CL.
Other Tips• If a cat has improved over time at the
shelter, ask for a re-evaluation by their team
• See if another rescue partner might be interested in helping a particular cat e.g. Siamese Rescue
• Good photos are really helpful for attracting potential adopters and for foster pleas
• Youtube clips are even better! You can often use them for marketing the cat later too!
APA! Cat Rescue:Keeping Recruits
• Who to recruit
• What wasn’t successful
• What works well
• Training strategy
Who to Recruit Cat experience preferred Detail orientated Able to think outside the
box Responsive to email Looking for 3 hour
commitment one day a week
How to RecruitE.g. volunteer recruitment slide
If you’re good at details and observations, love cats and can commitment to 3 hours - one day a week please consider joining our team and be the voice for the cats!
We offer in-depth training for anyone interested in joining our small team
Why join us? You like a challenge You want to have a direct impact on lives saved You want to meet all kinds of cats
This is a very wonderful and rewarding experience. Please consider joining our team.
What didn’t work!
Problems we ran into: Overwhelmed Panicked by deadlines Emotionally stressed
Jumping in and helping do the list immediately – the learn-as-you-go approach
- Offer to foster every cat
- Frantic phone calls/emails
- Hostility/anger- Breakdown- Walking away
HIGH VOLUNTEER TURNOVER
What didn’t work!
Remember – this can be a stressful and lonely volunteer position.
Evaluators get connected with cats they are assessing.
They may feel like no-one else understands and that they are the cats only chance to survive.
Jumping in and helping do the list immediately – the learn-as-you-go approach
HIGH VOLUNTEER TURNOVER
What works!
Step-by-step training is worth the investment
Info presented in small pieces Time to digest process Less pressure Multiple opportunities to reinforce protocols
the step-by-step approachLOW VOLUNTEER TURNOVER
APA!’s Training Strategythe step-by-step approach
Intro and tour of shelter How to do evaluations How to understand the reports Shadowing Leading Quarterl
y team meeting
s
LOW VOLUNTEER TURNOVER
Questions?