Pets

Cats, Kittens Flood RivCo Shelters: Campaign Launches To Save Them

The county is embarking on a "5,000 Cats Challenge" to increase "live outcomes" for the felines.

The Riverside County Department of Animal Services is inviting the community to help save 5,000 cat and kitten lives.
The Riverside County Department of Animal Services is inviting the community to help save 5,000 cat and kitten lives. (Scott Anderson/Patch)

RIVERSIDE COUNTY, CA — A campaign focused on moving cats out of Riverside County animal shelters and into homes, sparing them from euthanasia due to space constraints and other limitations, is starting to take shape, officials said Tuesday.

The "5,000 Cats Challenge" is an effort to increase "live outcomes" for the hundreds of felines that end up in one of the Riverside County Department of Animal Services' four shelters annually.

On Monday, the department hosted a panel discussion featuring multiple individuals who specialize in cat rescues and animal behavior. The chief topic was the county's voluminous "intake" of cats and kittens last year and how to prevent large numbers of the domestic pets from becoming a strain on the shelters in the future.

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“In 2023, the Riverside shelters had one of the highest cat and kitten intakes in the nation. This year, we’re happy that the Department of Animal Services is inviting the community to help save 5,000 cat and kitten lives,” said panelist Dr. Kate Hurley, program director of the UC Davis Koret Shelter Medicine Program.

"At this time, our staff is working closely with the visiting experts to outline plans to increase live outcomes for cats and kittens," Department of Animal Services spokeswoman Kerri Mabee told City News Service. "The plan will ... include removing barriers to adoption and increasing foster and spay/neuter opportunities."

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The 5,000 Cats Challenge will attempt to duplicate the nationwide "Million Cat Challenge" initiated in 2014 that resulted in over a million felines across the country being spared euthanasia over a five-year span.

Animal rescue organizations will be part of the countywide campaign. Mabee said mass adoption and fostering events are planned, likely beginning in April.

"This opportunity stands to make a significant difference in the lives of cats in the community and entering the shelter system," Department of Animal Services Director Erin Gettis said.

According to Mabee, about 125 cats and kittens in the county's four shelters are in need of adoption or foster placement currently. The Western Riverside County Animal Shelter in Jurupa Valley has the highest number at 65, which Mabee noted fluctuates daily.

Information on adoption and fostering opportunities can be found at https://rcdas.org.