British Columbia

Langley cat round-up aims to curb animal abandonments

The Langley Animal Protection Society is holding a cat round-up to encourage people to drop off their unwanted pets in a humane way.

Society says feral cats and unwanted pets are a big problem

Abandoned kittens are a problem in most Canadian municipalities according to the Langley Animal Protection Society. (Winnipeg Pet Rescue Shelter)

Langley's Animal Protection Society is trying to curb the problem of abandoned cats in its community.

Today [Saturday] it will hold a kitten and pregnant cat round-up at its facility at 26220 56 Avenue. It will take any cat from any resident, no questions asked, from 10 a.m. PT until 4 p.m. PT.

"There are just so many cats out there," said Sean Baker, Executive Director of the Langley Animal Protection Society.

Volunteers will register the cat, do a medical check and then spay and neuter the animal before it's handed over to a new family.

The society has raised $20,000 to pay the round-up and prearranged foster homes to take in the animals.

It's the second round-up of its kind in Langley. One was held last July. Baker says it's a response to pets being abandoned far too often.

The Langley Animal Protection Society will try to recover unwanted cats and send them to new homes. (Langley Animal Protection Society)

"We had some just a couple of weeks ago. Someone left them in a garbage can," he said."

"We had a box of kittens last summer. Ten kittens on a hot day boxed up and left by a dumpster in an alley. We had kittens left in a park in a Rubbermaid container. It just goes on. There's been a number of times when we've shown up here in the mornings and there's been a box of kittens at the front door."

The round-up will also accept pregnant mothers. The society will care for the mother until it gives birth and then find foster homes for the kittens.

Cats can breed as young as six months and sometimes have litters three times a year with up to six kittens in each.

"You do the math," said Baker who wants municipalities to do more to stop the over-population of cats. "We're out front in Langley, I don't know of any other municipality [in Metro Vancouver] doing round-ups like ours."

"It's a pretty big deal because our attitude towards cats is just slowly changing. I think for a long-time people felt, you know, cats are disposable so if I lose this one, no big deal.  I'll just go to the newspaper, Craigslist, get another free one People haven't placed a value that they place on dogs."

Baker encourages owners to spay and neuter their cats and keep them inside.

MAP: Langley Animal Protection Society