This kitten was rescued from possible euthanasia by a program geared toward fostering kittens until they are old enough to be adopted. Photo: Susan Olsen

Kitty litter

How some Valley residents are trying to save lives

Jennifer Dooms loves animals, especially cats. She has three adult cats of her own, but she is currently also caring for a mother cat with four kittens. If it wasn't for Dooms, it is very likely the mama cat and her babies would have been destroyed if taken to an animal shelter.

Dooms is one of many volunteers in the area who are fostering kittens that are too young to be adopted out of animal shelters in the hopes they'll be adopted down the road instead of euthanized. Dooms got involved after reading an article in a newsletter put out by Cat House on the Kings, a no-kill, no-cage cat sanctuary on the Kings River in Parlier.

"They get tons of calls from people around the Valley with feral cats with kittens in their apartment complexes and neighborhoods," she says. "It's overwhelming."

Overwhelming is an understatement. While animal shelters, such as the Central California S.P.C.A., do what they can, there is not money or space enough to care for all of the homeless pets. Despite the shelters' best efforts, hundreds of dogs, cats and kittens are euthanized because there is only so much they can do.

"There are just too many," says Kathy Scheer, a volunteer who has been working with Cat House on the Kings for about 9 years.

"The S.P.C.A. is too full to take care of them," Dooms says. "They are putting them to sleep as fast as they are getting them."

An article in the June 9 issue of the Fresno Bee (http://www.fresnobee.com/263/story/654408.html) said that on the average 89 kittens are brought into the shelter per day and only 15 or 20 are adopted on a "good day". Some days, adoptions run as low as only a couple. The shelter is bursting at the seams and euthanizing is its only option.


These kittens are in need of good homes. Photo: Susan Olsen

The problem is not just a local one, its nation-wide. Susan Olsen, who is best known for playing Cindy Brady on "The Brady Bunch," fosters kittens in Southern California.

"It is heartbreaking to go to the shelter and see just how many of these tiny babies get dumped there, " Olsen says. "I get emails almost daily about new underage kittens arriving at the shelter."

While all pets are special and there are lots of dogs in need of homes, the problem is mainly with the cat population these days.

"People spay and neuter their dogs and, because of leash laws, they don't let them roam the neighborhoods, humping everything in sight," Olsen says. "People let their cats roam, they don't get them fixed."

"Fresno County has one of the worst cat overpopulations in the country," Dooms says. "This is due to the backyard breeders preventing the mandatory spay and neuter law to be passed."

Dooms also says that in 10 years time, the litter from one cat, left unchecked, can produce one million offspring.

Scheer makes weekly visits to the S.P.C.A. to rescue kittens and their mothers. Although not all kittens in need of care have their mothers with them, Dooms, who has been a kitten foster parent for about five months, says the litters where the mother is present work best for her.

"I am able to work a full-time job and have many hobbies and still give the kittens and mothers a safe, temporary place to live and a lot of love," she says. "I just look forward to every night when I come home, getting the opportunity to play with them. They are so happy when they see me. There is one little girl that always has to be in my lap. I am so grateful that I have this opportunity."


Some foster kittens are so young they still need bottle feeding. Photo: Susan Olsen

Kittens are dropped off at shelters, with or without their mothers, at all stages of development. Some are only days or even hours old. Olsen's foster kittens have come to her without their mothers. Although she will take in "bottle babies" (those with no mother and that can not yet feed themselves), during this first year in her role as a kitten foster parent, she has learned what she can and cannot handle.

"I would not take the newborns," she says. "I recently lost a couple and I believe it's because I didn't realize just how much they needed. There is no substitute for a feline mother when it comes to newborns. I've been told by the experts that you can do everything right and it's still a crap shoot."

Not all foster kittens survive, no matter how much care they receive. Their losses are difficult, but it makes the need to preserver and save others that much stronger.

"You just want to save them all and you can't," Scheer says.

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Foster kittens are raised until they big enough for the shelters to put up for adoption. Photo: Susan Olsen

Fostering takes great love and dedication. But, as in all things, you can not let it overwhelm your life.

"This is an important lesson," Olsen says. "You really have to know your limits. You can't take on more than you can handle. It's irresponsible."

Much has been written on the benefits of pets as companions for the elderly and others with disabilities. For Olsen, fostering kittens is serving a dual purpose. In addition to saving lives, she hopes having the kittens around will benefit her son.

"My son is autistic," she says. "I feel like pets are very important to him because children with autism have a disability when it comes to empathy. Compassion is harder for them to understand and develop. I have hoped that these babies have helped bring out these qualities in my son. I know they have."

Fostering is 100% voluntary. The foster parents pay for the food and kitty litter out of their own pockets. If they are sick and need medical attention, depending on the fostering program they are in, the vet bills could come from the foster parents' pockets as well.

"I haven't had to pay for a vet bill," Dooms says. "Kathy Sceer has given me the supplies I have needed, no cost to me."

There is no form of compensation involved other than knowing they've saved the lives of these kittens and the affection the kittens have given them in return while in their care.


Jennifer Dooms holds one of the foster kittens in her care. Photo: Jennifer Dooms.

"If surrounding yourself with high levels of cuteness and love appeals to you, sign up," Olsen says. "We all like to feel loved and needed, or kneaded. Being able to stick my face into a little pile of kittens and hear a cacophony of purrs is great for me."

What can you do?

There is a great need for kitten foster parents. The local S.P.C.A. or organizations such as Cat House on the Kings can help prospective foster parents get involved.

"There is nothing like looking at the little faces, watching them grow, play, thrive, get homes and realize if you weren't doing this, these kittens would not be alive," Scheer says.

Olsen has fostered kittens through the animal shelter in her area as well as through an organization called Precious Paws. TV brother Chris (Peter Brady) Knight and his wife Adrianne Curry have adopted cats through Precious Paws and Curry has donated clothes to be sold on eBay to help raise money for the organization. Olsen has also started a blog on My Space about her experience as a kitten foster parent. www.myspace.com/kittencarpathia

If you can't foster, consider adopting. There are numerous dogs and cats as well as other critters who need good, loving homes. But understand that a pet is a commitment. Some pet owners who no longer wish to be burdened with their four-legged family member, have purposely taken and dumped them off on the side of the road far from home. This does nothing but exacerbate the homeless pet problem and severely scare, confuse and depress the cat or dog that is abandoned.

"Every single cat or kitten that is part of the foster program will be spayed and neutered, given their shots and put up for adoption," Dooms says. All they need is a good, loving home to go to.


Susan Olsen with friend Bill Morgan poses with a recent litter of kittens that she fostered. Photo: Susan Olsen

Spaying and neutering your pet, or even strays, is a great way to help curb the pet population explosion. Catch and release programs exist that capture feral cats, sterilize them and then return them to the area they were living.

"Please don't think you are doing them a favor by just feeding them," Olsen says. "It has been proven that killing stray cats does no good, sterilizing them is the only way to get rid of a colony. When you kill members of a colony, they replace them. But when you sterilize them, they tend to just grow old together and not recruit new members."

"There are ways of getting spays and neuters done very inexpensively," Dooms says. She suggests contacting Cat House on the Kings for information or any other shelter.


Kittens offer love and affection. Photo: Susan Olsen

How else can you help?

Donations (financial or supplies) are always welcome and volunteer work is greatly appreciated.

"Shelters need people to come and play with the dogs," Olsen says. "This takes a really special person. It is heartbreaking. You will want to take them all home. They are in cages and they're bored. If everyone volunteered at the shelters just once, people would get it through their thick heads how important it is to spay and neuter and be responsible."

Here are some links for more information:

Animal Rescue of Fresno (A.R.F.) (Dogs only):
www.arf-fresno.com

Cat House on the Kings:
www.cathouseonthekings.com

Central California S.P.C.A.:
www.ccspca.com

Emmie's Animal Rescue:
www.earescue.com

Kitten Carpathia (Olsen's kitten fostering page):
http://www.myspace.com/kittencarpathia

Precious Paws:
http://www.preciouspaws.org/

Valley Animal Center:
www.valleyanimal.org


Consider adopting a kitten or fostering kittens. Photo: Susan Olsen

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As timely now as it was last year.

There is still a HUGE cat population and the animal shelters are very impacted. PLEASE spay/neuter your pets.

FreakShow's picture

Mr Handyperson is not killing cats. Learn some respect.

Respect for your nieghbors property.
Most of us are tired of unwanted pests in our yards.
I caught a neighbors dog in my fenced yard had SPCA get it and a week later it was back in my yard.
I caught it again and SPCA took it.
It didn't come back.
If you want a pet then be responsible.

Famous Guest's picture

What's wrong with the

What's wrong with the advice? If the cat has a chip implanted, the ASPCA will contact the owner. If it doesn't have a chip and it is an outdoor cat, then I would argue that the owner doesn't care enough about the cat.

There aren't any effective deterrents that work, and really it should be the cat owner's responsibility to keep their cat off of other people's property. If you love your cat, make it an indoor only cat. There's really no excuse. Way too many hazards in the outside world that are out of your control.

Adarga's picture

Mr. Handyperson is killing cats!

thanks for the article. what jen is doing is great. both of my cats are adopted.

on another, more infuriating, article in the Fresno Bee today: Mark Heets' Mr. Handyperson column. In this column he was giving advice to a reader on how to keep neighborhood cats from coming into her yard. His answer: Feed and befriend the cats, then when they trust you put them in a carrier and take them to the ASPCA. "Those two have not come back...currently working on three more." he writes.

He is talking about neighborhood cats! People's pets! Is this not theft of someone's animal? Cause of emotional distress to the owners, who probably live nearby? Not to mention, conniving and cruel to an innocent cat who trusts humans??

I was appalled, not only that he wrote this as advice to his readers, but that the editor of the Bee was either too lazy or not compassionate enough to not run this syndicated column this week.

If he doesn't want cats in his yard, just spray them with a squirt gun or something? not sentence them to death.

Famous Guest's picture

RSPCA

I don't know how many of us in Fresno can aid you with info about animal services in the UK (maybe Rob), but I'd start by contacting the RSPCA (website: http://www.rspca.org.uk/).

Should you adopt, whatever else you do, make sure to have the cat sterilized (spayed or neutered).

Good Luck!

Adarga's picture

kittens

Very very sad subject. Extremely well articulated by the author. Neutering your pets is the best gift you can give to prevent tragedies from happening. A huge thank you to the author for bringing this to print so incredibly.

Janet Maday
Belle Haven, Virginia

Famous Guest's picture

Great article

Sad subject, that we still have to be educated on pet overpopulation. Thank you for posting this important topic. There is a connection between poverty and ignorance about the ramifications of allowing pets to breed uncontrolled. Fresno ranks high on both counts. And we are blessed to also have people like Jen and Cat House on the Kings who are so dedicated and give so much. Bless you. Rhiannon

Famous Guest's picture

Awesome job on this feature

Awesome job on this feature about a very real and disturbing problem.

Jen is a very, very dear friend of mine so I've seen first hand all the love and care she gives to the kittens and cats she rescues and fosters on a daily basis.

These are two very special and unique women to take on such an important -- and often heartbreaking -- cause.

Nuria*

Famous Guest's picture

Kudos to Jen and Cindy. As

Kudos to Jen and Cindy. As a fellow cat lover, it just warms my heart to know that ther are others out there who feel as strongly about this subject as I do. I have personally spent thousands on fixing, medicine on strays, not to mention love and care that the sick ones require. I will continure in my quest as these ladies surly will too.

Bless you and all the unsung heros out there who love our little "spirit children."

Famous Guest's picture

This has to stop.It breaks

This has to stop.It breaks my heart every time I think about those poor little kittens being put to sleep.People should have to go down and watch them killing these babies maybe it would stop.

Famous Guest's picture

Great JOB

Keep up the good work Jen and Cindy!

Famous Guest's picture

Such cute kittens,that need

Such cute kittens,that need homes.Its sad to see strays wondering out on the streets!I almost cried reading this and seeing these cats.All these people should be fined for not neutering there cats.Great article Jen.

CasPer The Cat LoVer

Famous Guest's picture

Spay and Neuter!

I just wanted to thanks FreakShow and FresnoFamous for posting this story! I have been trying to STRESS how important it is to spay and neuter your cats. This is where it must start.
If you are interested in Fostering Kittens, please contact me at Jennifer_Dooms@yahoo.com or call Cat House On The Kings.

Thank you,
Jen

Famous Guest's picture

cats

Jennifer Dooms is one of my very best friends...I have heard from her own mouth and even seen with my own eyes the millions of cats stray out on the streets. If people would just take more of a chance in their lives and open a room in their home for just enough time to save a kittens life for it to be sent off then again to a home for life...it would be more help than they could ever imagine. I love you Jen, and I am so proud to call you my friend for all of what you do for these kittens is absolutely amazing!!!

Famous Guest's picture

What beautiful kittens!

What beautiful kittens! Keep up the great work guys.

Famous Guest's picture

The Gift of Love

I think it's such a positive action, to such a sad situation. The gift of love to such a wonderful animal. I love cats, always have.
You will be so blessed for taking care of these little felines! I to had a handicapped child. These little babies know, that something is different. Good luck and many blessings to you.

Famous Guest's picture

I think it's really great

I think it's really great that there are people out there who care enough to do this. bless you! I love all animal's and they deserve the right to live!

Famous Guest's picture

Great job my fellow cat

Great job my fellow cat people.cats are important part of our lives we need and they need us:) help us save them please

Famous Guest's picture

It is such a wonderful and

It is such a wonderful and postive asset our society has being able to adopt and look after these wonderful animals, so that they can be cared,cherished and most of all respected for.
This is such a kind thing !
Keep up the fantastic work.

Famous Guest's picture

This wonderful article

Thank you so much Jen and Cindy and for those who wrote and put this whole article together and Susan, wow those pictures are so amazing! The whole way it is written really shows what is going on for these sweet furry friends. We need to be more aware and do our part. Please spay and neuter your pets for less deaths for these poor animals! If people can foster that would be so wonderful too! I live in a no pet building or I would be doing the same. But I do have dwarf hamsters and one needs surgery tomorrow. My vet said I could just let her die slowly with her tumor, but how could I? I took on these girls as a responsibility and to give them every chance I can. We do need to realize too that we may get a cute baby, but that baby grows up and we need to love and protect them as they age. Thank you all for loving these animals and for giving your pets a wonderful loving protective home! Bless you all! Robin

Famous Guest's picture

Thank you for all of your

Thank you for all of your hard work and dedication to saving kitties!

Famous Guest's picture

Nice article

cats are cool

Famous Guest's picture

This is the nicest thing

This is the nicest thing I've seen all day. Thanks, Jen and Cindy, for helping the kitties. Just walking into a shelter is torture - to do what you're doing is lovely and brave. My shelter kittens, Billy and Betty, and I salute you;-)
Tamara

Famous Guest's picture

I love seeing people taking

I love seeing people taking the initiative, as the ones in this world who can really make a difference, to take care of animals like this. In the world we live in, it seems like the smaller ones are always forgotten, and this just warms me up inside to know people CARE! Great job to those involved!!!

Famous Guest's picture

This article totally breaks

This article totally breaks my heart. I am a huge animal lover and hate to see any animal euthanized. People, please, please, please spay and neuter your pets!!!

Famous Guest's picture

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