Uploaded on Jan 24, 2025
Discover 24 impactful ways Alley Cat Allies protected cats in 2024. From groundbreaking advocacy efforts to life-saving TNR programs, learn how we championed feline welfare and created lasting change for cats and communities worldwide. Explore our achievements today!
24 Ways we worked to protect cats in 2024
24 Ways we worked to
protect cats in 2024
Happy almost New Year! We want to extend our heartfelt thanks to you for
helping us protect and save cats’ lives every single day. Your compassion,
dedication, and action make an incredible impact, and we’re truly grateful to have
you with us in our mission to build a world where ALL cats are valued and
protected.
Even as we prepare for all the work ahead, we’re also reflecting on the incredible
change we accomplished together this year.
Here are 24 ways (there are many, many more!) we worked on behalf of cats in
2024:
1. We took historic legal action to protect community cats in Puerto Rico
If not for Alley Cat Allies and our supporters like you, a deadly removal of
community cats in Puerto Rico would be underway right now.
The United States National Park Service (NPS), which announced intention to
eradicate cats from the San Juan National Historic Site late in 2023, planned to
start ripping cats from their outdoor homes as early as October 1, 2024.
Alley Cat Allies’ legal efforts—including launching a historic lawsuit against the
NPS in March 2024—and refusal to back down forced the NPS to agree to halt all
movement on its cruel plan until a federal court decision in 2025. Cats like Bella,
Mufasina, and Llorin are still eating, sleeping, and playing amid the surf-swept
rocks of their outdoor home because of our action—and our supporters like you
who make it possible.
We will continue our fight until the NPS abandons its inhumane and illegal plan pe
rmanently
, and community cats in Puerto Rico are protected and supported as the
community members they are.
2. We launched our community resource tool™
The Alley Cat Allies Community Resource Tool is here to help advocates like you protect
the cats who are your community. With a few clicks, you can find lifesaving resources for
cats in your area including low-cost spay and neuter clinics, cat food banks, and more.
Cats Are Community™ and deserve a community that supports them. With our
Community Resource Tool, you can discover local cat advocates and access assistance
that benefits cats whether they live outdoors or indoors.
3. We helped win a major victory for Ohio cats
Alley Cat Allies’ amicus brief helped inform a
critical Ohio Supreme Court decision for cats and kittens. The court ruled that
Ohio’s companion animal cruelty law protects all cats, including community cats
who are unowned and live outdoors, as “companion animals.”
This is a major victory for cats throughout Ohio and ensures community cats are
protected equally under animal cruelty laws.
4. Our rapid response team saved cats during historic Texas fires
With smoke still choking the air and charred landscape on either side of them, an
Alley Cat Allies Rapid Response Team
drove directly into the Texas communities most impacted by the historic Smokeho
use Creek Fire
to deliver lifesaving support for cats and kittens. We connected with local
advocates to aid recovery efforts and provided critical care for smoke inhalation
and burn wounds to cats like Rubble, Mona, and Phoenix.
5. We kicked off our veterinarian training program™
Growing a powerful movement means ensuring the next generation is ready to
take up the lifesaving mantle. That’s why we launched the
Alley Cat Allies Veterinarian Training Program, starting in the Caribbean islands of
Saint Kitts and Nevis!
The goal of our Veterinarian Training Program is to help both experienced and
novice veterinarians bring the most effective TNR techniques to their
communities to save more lives.
6. We provided TNR and food to thousands of Atlantic County cats
In 2024, Alley Cat Allies funded spay and neuter, including through Trap-Neuter-
Return (TNR), and other lifesaving care for more than 3000 community cats and
indoor cats in Atlantic County, New Jersey. We also provided food to an incredible
600 community cats per day through a first-of-its-kind community cat food bank
in the county.
In 2025, our work with the Humane Society of Atlantic County is
moving forward to bring critical care to thousands more cats and kittens.
7. We helped hundreds of Tennessee cats with feline frenzy®
The Alley Cat Allies Feline Frenzy in Lebanon, Tennessee, this year reached hundreds of indoor
and community cats with spay and neuter and vaccinations! On top of that milestone, hundreds
more cats received ongoing cat food support—all covered by Alley Cat Allies.
8. We filed a lawsuit to stop the illegal killing of cats in Summit County, Ohio
Alley Cat Allies
filed a lawsuit in the Court of Common Pleas against Summit County, Ohio, and its
county-operated animal shelter to stop the needless, cruel, and illegal killing of cats.
The Summit County Animal Control Department is an entity meant to uphold the
laws. Instead, it is improperly and inhumanely ‘euthanizing’ animals and killing cats
for simply being deemed ‘feral’.
Stopping the senseless and inhumane killing of cats is our top priority.
9. We are providing legal support to achieve justice for Juliet
Alley Cat Allies is providing prosecution support to achieve justice for Juliet, who
was tortured and killed in Hamilton, Ohio. Surveillance video revealed that Juliet
was shoved into a garbage bag and then slammed violently on the ground by the
perpetrator.
We’ll keep you updated as the case moves forward.
10.We offered a reward to find who shot George the cat
In a horrific act of senseless cruelty, George the cat was shot in the back leg with
a shotgun in Henrietta Township, Ohio. He survived his injury but was so badly
maimed that his leg had to be surgically amputated. Alley Cat Allies covered the
costs of his procedure and he has since recovered.
We offered a sizable reward for information leading to the arrest and conviction of
the person or persons responsible for shooting George.
11.We helped Granite Shoals adopt a TNR ordinance
The ordinance, which had heavy input from Alley Cat Allies, officially protects TNR
and community cats in the Texas city. This step forward came just months after
disturbing comments about shooting, poisoning, and killing cats were made by
the former Granite Shoals City Manager and a wildlife advisory committee.
Today, we continue to support TNR in Granite Shoals!
12.We responded after back-to-back hurricanes
In fall 2024, Alley Cat Allies
provided lifesaving care to cats and kittens impacted by both Hurricane Helene an
d Hurricane Milton
. Cats like Jack, Flash, and Toffee were been swept from disaster zones in Florida
and into safe spaces to recover thanks to our disaster response in collaboration
with advocates, organizations, and veterinarians on the ground in impacted
communities.
13.We celebrated our biggest Global Cat Day and National Feral Cat Day yet
On October 13, we inspired advocates the world over to share the global truth
that Cats Are Community, and highlighted communities that are leading with
lifesaving, evidence-based Trap-Neuter-Return (TNR) programs from Tennessee to
France.
Global Cat Day and National Feral Cat Day continue to grow, as does our
movement!
14.We gave advocates the tools to share the truth
The truth is one of our movement’s most powerful tools to save cats and kittens.
Misinformation costs millions of cats their lives every year, and Alley Cat Allies
works to set the record straight.
Our new Share the Truth resource, including a pocket guide, is spreading the facts
about cats across the nation and around the world.
15.We defended community cat caregivers
Alley Cat Allies took swift legal action when a community cat caregiver in Parma,
Ohio, was threatened with nearly one year of jail time and over $2,000 in fines for
doing TNR in her community. An attorney working with Alley Cat Allies
represented the caregiver in court and, in October,
all charges against her were dismissed.
16.Mr. Meow got justice
In September 2024, Colton Fontes was
sentenced to 14 years in prison for felony animal cruelty related to killing tabby cat Mr.
Meow
in 2022 and several other highly disturbing charges including rape and sexual battery.
Alley Cat Allies was involved in the case from the beginning, attended court hearings,
communicated with the Mr. Meow’s family, and brought the case to further public
attention. According to the Calaveras County Sheriff’s Office, the investigation into the
shooting and killing of Mr. Meow helped make Fontes’ arrest for the other charges
possible.
17.We exposed misrepresentation of TNR and community cats
Alley Cat Allies was compelled to address the shockingly biased, dangerously
misinformed, and often downright insulting portrayal of Trap-Neuter-Return (TNR),
community cats, and the people who care for and protect them in a pieces published in
The New Yorker and Forbes.
18.We exposed how opposition to TNR is leading to lethal action
In our video, we showed our supporters around the world how Alley Cat Allies is fighting
opposition to TNR, correcting dangerous disinformation about cats, and saving cats’
lives. We won’t back down until every cat is valued and protected as the community
member they are.
19.We saved Maximus with unique surgery
Maximus (AKA Maximus Decimus Merkitteus) is a young cat is full of life and love
for anyone and everyone, and has never met a stranger. He’s even best friends
with his dog brother. But at not even a year old, Maximus experienced a medical
emergency that had his family rushing him to the veterinarian for treatment. The
diagnosis: A portosystemic liver shunt.
Alley Cat Allies provides support to veterinary professionals across the nation,
which made the unique surgery Maximus needed to survive possible. Now, he’s
happy, healthy, and living his life to the fullest—among many other cats and
kittens who received access to care through our work together.
20.Our cat help desk answered the call to save cats’ lives
Alley Cat Allies is dedicated to ensuring caregivers have the resources and
support to provide their cats with the best care possible. That is why the Alley Cat
Allies Cat Help Desk is a lifeline, offering expert guidance and resources
(including our low-cost veterinary care directory and our animal food bank
directory) to help people across the nation and around the world protect cats in
their communities.
This year, the work of our Cat Help Desk touched all 50 states and beyond!
21.We rallied against ripping cats from their homes in Alabama
After discovering that owned and community cats faced deadly policies in
Birmingham,
Alley Cat Allies called on the city and its mayor to cease persecuting cats and their ca
regivers immediately
.
In a shocking situation caught on video, tabby cat Nemo was lured from her own front
porch by animal control officers and impounded.
We sent a letter asking the city to stop its aggressive action and rallied advocates to
join us. We continue to stand in defense of Birmingham’s cats.
22.We saved cats from suffering in a shelter
If you met Opal and siblings Aster and Orchid today, you’d never guess they were
once languishing in inhumane conditions in a municipal shelter. The kittens were
dehydrated and suffering from upper respiratory infections, while Opal was
anemic and contending with a coccidia infection.
Alley Cat Allies took a stand to save them, and all have beautifully blossomed
under our care. With the right veterinary care (plus a lot of TLC!), Opal, Aster, and
Orchid healed fully and
took the next steps in their journeys toward a much happier tomorrow!
23.We defended South Carolina County’s TNR program
This year, the council of Richland County, South Carolina, considered passing a
dangerous amendment to remove the county’s Community Cat Diversion Program
—a successful TNR initiative that has saved thousands of cats’ lives.
Alley Cat Allies rallied advocates to speak out, and the amendment did not move
forward.
This is just one of many communities in which Alley Cat Allies rallied advocates
for lifesaving change in 2024.
24.We continue to stand up for cat victims of cruelty
We are seeking justice, including through rewards, in multiple cruelty cases
across the country. Apollo, an Ohio community cat, was discovered with a horrific
wound to his foot that meant his leg had to be amputated. Alley Cat Allies
covered the costs of his surgery and care, and sent out a call for any information.
We also offered rewards for information leading to an arrest and conviction in the
killing of several cats in the town of Lake Clarke Shores, Florida, and in relation to
a series of disturbing Facebook videos in Washington, Missouri.
Help us start 2025 strong for cats
Right now, your gift will be 4X-MATCHED to have 4x the impact for cats and
kittens in the new year. We have big plans to make big changes for cats, and we
need you with us more than ever! Please consider giving today.
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