Aggie Cats: after 10 years still improving lives of campus cats
Aggie Cats is an organization at Utah State University dedicated to protecting and improving the lives of the feral cats on campus as well as managing the population.
The program just recently celebrated its 10-year anniversary and has plans of expanding its resources in the near future.
“Aggie Cats is based on the concept of trap-neuter-release, TNR, which has been proven to be the most effective way to reduce the number of feral cats,” said Whitney Milligan, director of residence life and one of the founders of Aggie Cats. “Cats pick where they live; we don’t decide that. Cats live around where people are because they are not wild animals even though they are feral and wild-behaving, they are still domestic. Cats aren’t like skunks or raccoons; they are not wildlife and they are very dependent on humans and human activity.”
Cats congregate where they have access to shelter and food. So at USU they usually congregate around housing since the dumpsters around housing have food in them.
“The first step of our program is to identify a location where cats are and then we establish a feeding station. We then perform TNR,” Milligan said. “After that, the cats are released where we found them and we continue to observe them, feed them once a day and water twice a day. We observe whether or not they are healthy and in need of vet care. We want to make sure that they are not suffering so that is part of what we do too.”
The first trapping took place near the Junction on campus 10 years ago. The pre-vet club performed the first TNR and this was started just as a demonstration on how spays and neuters were done. After the cats were released they started to notice that the number of cats were significantly decreasing. That is when the founders of Aggie Cats got together to figure out policies, and make it a true TNR program.
“For the past 10 years we have trapped and fixed about 80 cats,” Milligan said. “Based on the way that the humane society counts cat birth rate, a female cat goes into heat at four months old and say that cat has four kittens: two male, two female and then these kittens have babies and so on and so on. A cat can have three or four litters a year. Due to that calculation we have prevented the birth of over 9,000 kittens.”
Right now Aggie Cats has three cat colonies and one feeding station. There is one colony at the Junction, which is home to five cats. The second colony is located at the town homes on campus with a regular of four cats but during the winter it bumps up to eight. The third is Bob’s colony located next to the Student Living Center (named Bob’s colony because of the cat named Bob, who has been the only constant cat at the colony while other cats come and go), with five or six regular cats, but in the wintertime it bumps up to 11.
Some students are coming together to work on a service project for the Aggie Cats, in behalf of the National Residence Hall Honorary, NRHH, an organization affiliated with the Residence Hall Association, RHA.
“Our plan is to build six to 10 shelters for the cats of Aggie Cats,” said Tyler Thomas, a USU student and a resident assistant at Mountain View Tower. “It gets cold in the winter here in Logan, and it is not uncommon for feral cats to die due to the elements. We, the NRHH, seek to fix this problem by providing them with this much-needed protection.”
For students and volunteers involved with Aggie Cats, this is a way for them to give back and feel like they are a part of something that helps out some of USU’s animal life.
“For me personally, I love God and His creatures, and so I feel a responsibility to help them in their distress,” Thomas said. “I believe that it is a duty of any good person anywhere to relieve suffering wherever they might find it, be it among animals or humans. Building these shelters is a small contribution that I can make to help relieve some of that suffering and allow these cats to live a full and enjoyable life.”
For the cats, Aggie Cats provides a home, a shelter, food; the cats are taken care of and they receive veterinary care. But for volunteers, Aggie Cats provides a sense of well-being.
“It is very beneficial when I get to see the cats and I get to touch them, that is always a positive reinforcement for me,” said Hannah Van Leeuwen, a USU resident assistant and senior at the university. “Not a lot of people on campus know that the cats are there, which is kind of sad, but it does bring a good purpose since there are people out there that want to get involved, that want to take care of animals and want to contribute. It is nice for those of us that have found this little piece of volunteer work. If you talk to the volunteers they are excited and passionate, they love seeing the cats and they love being a part of it. Everyone who feeds them is a part of the campus and it makes the cats part of the campus.”
Aggie Cats is funded by donations and runs on all volunteer work, so for anyone looking to become involved contact Whitney Milligan at whitney.milligan@usu.edu
— jillian.mccarthy@aggiemail.usu.edu
I run a cat shelter and am very concerned about the welfare and safety of cats, but we adopt cats as indoor cats only because of their decimation to wildlife, spread of disease and soil contamination from parasites carried by domestic cats. I am not sure what the goal of this TNR program is other than “protecting and improving the lives of the feral cats on campus as well as managing the population. ” TNR as it was originally intended was to eventually eliminate all free-roaming and feral cats from the environment. But in this case, as with so many others, 10 or more years later there are still a significant number of cats remaining because new cats are attracted to the colony and to food. It sounds like these colonies will continue on in perpetuity – not the original goal of TNR. While you may have prevented more cats from being born, the cats that are still fed and sheltered have been hunting and killing wildlife all these years. Yes, well fed cats still hunt even though they may not eat their prey. Do you know what happened to the cats that are no longer in the colony? I assume they died away from anybody in a not very nice fashion. Death by disease, infection, trauma, exposure is not usually quick and results in much suffering, events that are not often observed by the people who “manage” these colonies. Out of sight out of mind. As a higher learning institution I would hope that the students and faculty would research all the problems associated with the TNR practice as it relates to public health and damage to the environment as well as more suffering and delayed death for the homeless cats. Perhaps a kinder act would be to remove the unadoptable cats from the environment and give them a gentler death by euthanasia to reduce the suffering of outdoor cats and to give our diminishing wildlife a better chance at survival.
10 years of TNR and you’ve still got some 2 dozen cats. Typical for trap-neuter-return programs. What they really are is cat colony perpetuation programs. Current cats get hit by cars or killed by coyotes or dogs or parasites or disease. New cats wander in, attracted to the plentiful food provided by the “caretakers”. Cat owners see these colonies and think that would be a good place to dump off their own unwanted cats, since they will be “cared for”. There are always a couple of cats that evade the traps, so new kittens appear. And the colony lives on and on, year after year. And all that time the cats do what cats do. They kill an average of 2.6 native birds a week. They kill countless native small mammals…. voles, shrews, chipmunks and other creatures that are important to biodiversity and that should be providing meals for the native birds of prey and other predators that actually belong in the environment here. They defecate in gardens and flowerbeds and yards, spreading the eggs of their brain parasite, toxoplasma gondii, by the tens of millions, contaminating the soil, water, and in dry conditions even the air. 60 million Americans now have toxoplasmosis. We know it causes blindness in children and birth defects. Scientist think it is also linked to schizophrenia, OCD, Alzheimer’s, suicide, depression, and autism. Of course, there’s also hookworm, ringworm, fleas, bartonellosis, and rabies.
But it’s all worth it to “save” these cats that no one really wants badly enough to give them a real indoor home, right? It’s not really saving them either, of course. It’s just keeping them from humane euthanasia. And of course there’s also the huge ego-stroke for the people doing the “saving”.
Come on USU! By allowing this to continue you’re putting your students’ health at risk. You’re contributing to the depletion of biodiversity through the needless deaths, both directly and indirectly, of many, many native birds and animals. And you’re perpetuating the existence of these non-native highly destructive invasive species. Do the right thing. Remove the cats. Prohibit feeding. Prohibit students from having cats on campus (many of which get dumped when the school-year ends). End the useless TNR program. http://www.urbanwildlands.org/Resources/2009LongcoreetalConBio.pdf
This is irresponsible and cruel…. the cats, the wildlife and the population of students will all suffer… Why are these people for cat suffering ? they act like the cat can only die if it’s humanely Euthanized, here is the truth about the dastardly TNR…..http://ricknbaby0076.blogspot.com/2015/07/tnr-and-death-by-attrition-truth.html