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  1. Community cats can be divided into two basic categories: stray and feral and they often live in colonies. The common factor of all community cats is that they are unowned. Feeding or caring for community cats does not mean you own them.

  2. Community cats are unowned cats who live outdoors and who have never been socialized with people. These cats are fearful of people and are not likely to ever become a lap cat or enjoy living indoors.

  3. How the CAHS Community Cat Program helps: • Free use of our live traps. • Instruction from our trained staff on how to trap safely and quickly. • Free spay/neuter for your community cats (feral/free-roaming). • Free vaccines: rabies, FVRCP vaccine. • Free ear tipping (ear tipping is mandatory).

  4. What is a community cat? Outdoor, unowned or free-roaming cats that live in our community are referred to as "community cats." Community cats can have a range of behaviors and socialization levels, and can live long, healthy lives outdoors. They are occasionally called stray, feral, alley, wild, neighborhood or tomcat.

  5. What the Community Cat Program Provides • Free use of our live traps. • Instruction from our trained staff on how to trap safely and quickly. • Free spay/neuter for your community cats (feral/free-roaming). • Free vaccines: rabies, FVRCP vaccine. • Free ear tipping (ear tipping is mandatory).

  6. Community Cats TNR is a group of volunteers, caregivers, and veterinarians working in the City of Ludington and Mason County, Michigan to reduce and stabilize the number of free-roaming, abandoned, homeless, feral cats through a humane program known as Trap-Neuter-Return (TNR).

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  8. Humane Fort Wayne's Community Cat program aims to improve the health of free-roaming cats and reduce shelter death through targeted sterilization. Learn more today.

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