The Ontario SPCA and Humane Society welcomes 36 Northern cats in need of loving homes

by | Media Releases |

IMMEDIATE RELEASE

Stouffville, ON (Oct. 10, 2024) – With winter weather closing in, 36 Northern cats from Kenora made the more than 1,700-kilometre journey to find loving homes through the Ontario SPCA and Humane Society’s adoption program.

The cats and kittens came from Kenora Cat Shelter and will be placed up for adoption at Ontario SPCA animal centres in Midland, Muskoka and York Region. Cats adopted from the Ontario SPCA are spayed or neutered, vaccinated, microchipped and they go home with food from Royal Canin to help them transition into their new home.

To help even more animals, the Ontario SPCA delivered 750 lbs. of cat food on this trip, which was generously donated by Mars Canada and will provide 3,000 meals to animals in the North.

A lack of access to basic animal wellness services, such as veterinarians and spay/neuter services, has contributed to an increase in animal populations across Northern Canada. The Ontario SPCA and its partners work alongside communities to deliver much-needed resources, such as food and mobile wellness services, and to manage animal populations through spay/neuter and re-homing initiatives.

“There are more adoptable animals in the North than there are homes, which is why we are working together to bring these animals to areas of the province where there are families waiting to adopt,” says Arista Wogenstahl, Regional Manager, Northern Outreach Services, Ontario SPCA and Humane Society. “These re-homing initiatives help ensure our partners in the North have the capacity to help animals in need during the cold winter months ahead.”

“The Kenora Cat Shelter’s ability to continue to support the increasing amount of stray, abandoned and homeless cats within our surrounding area relies heavily on our partnership with other animal rescues, including the Ontario SPCA,” says Lisa Lyle, board member with the Kenora Cat Shelter. “Transferring some of our many adoptable cats to areas in Southern Ontario with fewer stray cats, and a greater population of adopters, allows for more room in our shelter to continue taking in the rising number of cats in our area that need our help.”

Interested in adopting? Visit the Ontario SPCA’s adoption page at ontariospca.ca/adopt to meet animals available for adoption.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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MEDIA CONTACT

Media Relations

Ontario SPCA and Humane Society

905-898-7122 x 375

media@ontariospca.ca

 

The Ontario SPCA and Humane Society 

The Ontario SPCA and Humane Society is a registered charity that has been changing the lives of animals for over 150 years. The Society provides care, comfort and compassion to animals in need in communities across Ontario. It values all animals and advocates to treat them with respect and kindness. The Society strives to keep pets and families together and do so through a variety of community support services, such as sheltering and adoptions, including emergency sheltering, feral cat management programs, animal transfers, food distribution, humane education, animal advocacy, and spay/neuter services.

The Ontario SPCA does not receive annual government funding and relies on donations to provide programs and services to help animals in need. To learn more, or to donate, visit ontariospca.ca. Charitable Business # 88969-1044-RR0002.

The Ontario SPCA and Humane Society Provincial Office sits on the traditional territory of the Wendat, the Anishinabek Nation, the Haudenosaunee Confederacy, the Mississaugas of Scugog, Hiawatha and Alderville First Nations and the Métis Nation. This territory was the subject of the Dish With One Spoon Wampum Belt Covenant, an agreement between the Iroquois Confederacy and the Ojibwe and allied nations to peaceably share and care for the resources around the Great Lakes. The treaties that were signed for this particular parcel of land are collectively referred to as the Williams Treaties of 1923.

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