That is good to hear. When we did TNR work at the cat rescue I worked at out of state, it was paid time for all of us and we didn't have volunteers or property owner's doing the trapping. I have been doing one-on-one training with each person that needs TNR assistance or has a stray they need trapped and then utilizing our small network to get the cat transferred to me. It's worked out well so far. Thank you for that explanation!
Original Message:
Sent: 04-14-2026 07:13 AM
From: Amy Zavala
Subject: Ideas in how to get my community involved in our TNR movement?
Yes, we are volunteer-ran. I have one volunteer who is basically "full-time". I work at a full-time job, as do most of my other volunteers. We rely heavily on the colony caregivers do the trapping and transporting, and it's worked great so far. We provide all the equipment and training, they trap the cats and take them to the appointment we've scheduled for them. We have a vet who is an hour's drive from us who gives us a discount. We are also very rural, so it's not easy to get things done! We're attending a community health fair in a couple of weeks, where we will educate about TNR, and we'll be selling some t-shirts and necklaces. We'll also have a big "DONATION JAR" front and center. If you could find one person among your volunteers who is outgoing and has the flexibility to attend community events, it could be a big benefit in a lot of ways. I wish I had someone who could work on grants full-time for me!
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Amy Zavala
President
Shadow Cats 806
TX
Original Message:
Sent: 04-14-2026 06:39 AM
From: Maria Plattner
Subject: Ideas in how to get my community involved in our TNR movement?
Hi Amy,
I have one vet that will do two neuters or one spay a week that will give us discounted rates, otherwise I'm driving about 2 hours away to get them sterilized at a low cost (we are very rural).
Are you volunteer ran? Myself and our 4 other volunteers work full-time as well and it's hard to balance, doable because we believe in the cause but I do worry about burnout. Our area has meetings like that but it's typically during the day so it's hard for us to get to go. I will dig deeper into that. Thank you so much for that idea.
I attended the zoom meeting with Maddie's fund yesterday, it was about social media and it was so helpful.
I needed to hear that there are more like minded people out there. Thank you.
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Maria Plattner
Director
Forest Felines
MN
Original Message:
Sent: 04-13-2026 06:04 AM
From: Amy Zavala
Subject: Ideas in how to get my community involved in our TNR movement?
Thank you for those suggestions, Stacy. Maria, I'm in a situation similar to yours. I've had a TNR program for 2 years, but not a lot of local help. Do you have a vet who knows what you are doing and is willing to give you discounted rates? As far as the community, I'm very active on social media, and that's how I've managed to find some other like-minded people to pitch in. I sign up for every community event this area has, and I talk to anyone who will listen at these events. I also give them handouts about TNR. I do a lot of pics and videos, and I make them FUN. I want people to see how rewarding this work is. I'm having discussions with the city council members in my town about adopting a "community cat program". I'm also developing a relationship with local Animal Control. There are probably more people out there who are like you than you realize, the challenge is finding them and getting them motivated to make some big changes.
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Amy Zavala
President
Shadow Cats 806
TX
Original Message:
Sent: 04-12-2026 02:04 AM
From: Stacy LeBaron
Subject: Ideas in how to get my community involved in our TNR movement?
Hi Maria, Thank you so much for starting up a cat organization to help with TNR and Community Cat support. This is the best group to get ideas etc. It sounds like the first step is trying to build your group with more people who are like minded about cats and want to help. If it seems appropriate I would post in your local neighborhood social media that you are looking for volunteers to help buildout a TNR program and fundraise to help support this program. At Community Cats Central we offer monthly TNR certification workshops that you can require folks to take(it is only $10) to get certified and then can access benefits like access to traps, ability to help with spay/neuter and transport to appointments, trapping etc. You can define those benefits. It will save you a lot of time if people aren't willing to do a 2-3 hr virtual training then you know ahead of time that they aren't really going to be a committed volunteer. In terms of fundraising- I always say it takes 4 people fundraising to support 1 person trapping. Check out Get Fully Funded- they have some great resources etc. I am not sure what your spay/neuter costs are and what volume you are at but check out: https://mnsnap.org/community-cats/. You might want to reach out and connect with other groups in the state to share and collaborate. I hope this is a helpful good start. Reach out if you need anything.
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Stacy LeBaron
Head Cat
The Community Cats Podcast
Warren VT
978-239-2090
Original Message:
Sent: 04-10-2026 12:06 PM
From: Maria Plattner
Subject: Ideas in how to get my community involved in our TNR movement?
I've grown up in a small rural town in northern Minnesota where cats were a dime a dozen. I've always been a cat person since I was a little girl and not many people under it. When I moved and started working at a cat rescue out of state, I felt like I was with my people. Now, being back home in the town I grew up in, it's still the same- dime a dozen.
I recently started a cat rescue after finding yet another frozen dead cat in a colony I help with. We're a registered nonprofit for community cats/feral cats/strays that need to be trapped. We have a TNR Program and our website has educational information that I made to be shared and printed- whatever to get the word out. But noone is interested in that- they just don't want the cats. I just trapped and brought a cat in that had been living in horrible conditions with its eye hanging from the socket for months and others are pretty nonchalant about it because it's a cat.
Our TNR Request list is at 139 within just 6 days and within 40 miles from our location, but none wants to donate to help with the TNR services.
I'm stuck- I want to continue to TNR, continue to help the ones that have nowhere else to go but my community isn't interested and I can't continue to pay for everything myself.
Any ideas on how I can get my community to change that dime a dozen mindset so we can continue to make an impact?
#CommunityCatManagement
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Maria Plattner
Director
Forest Felines
MN
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