1,000 feral cats released onto Chicago streets to tackle rat explosion

Authored by thehill.com and submitted by _DEAL_WITH_IT_

A Chicago animal shelter is using feral cats to tackle the city’s rat problem.

The Windy City has ranked number one on pest control company Orkin’s list of the “rattiest cities” in the U.S. for six consecutive years, as Chicago has had the most rodent pest treatments.

Our country is in a historic fight against the Coronavirus. Add Changing America to your Facebook or Twitter feed to stay on top of the news.

In an effort to rein in the explosion of rodents, the Tree House Humane Society kicked off a program to release feral felines into areas experiencing rat problems.

After humanely capturing the feral cats, the humane society spays or neuters the animals and places them into residential and commercial settings with rodent infestations to act as an environmentally friendly rodent control.

The Tree House Humane Society says only rescued cats who cannot thrive in a home or shelter environment, or cannot be reintegrated into their former colonies, are used for the Cats at Work program. After receiving approval for a working cat, property and business owners are responsible for their well-being.

“Property and business owners provide food, water, shelter, and wellness to the cats who work for them. In most cases, our Cats at Work become beloved members of the family or team,” the shelter says on its website.

According to WGN 9, the Tree House Humane society has placed over 1,000 feral cats onto Chicago streets since 2012.

“We’ve had a lot of our clients tell us that before they had cats, they would step outside their house and rats would actually run across their feet,” Sarah Liss of Tree House Humane Society told WGN 9.

While the cats will hunt and catch rodents on occasion, their presence alone is a deterrent.

“They are actually deterring them with their pheromones,” Liss told WGN 9. “That’s enough to keep the rats away."

READ MORE STORIES FROM CHANGING AMERICA

EXTREMELY RARE CALICO LOBSTER RESCUED FROM RESTAURANT

TRILLIONS OF CICADAS ARE ABOUT TO SWARM 15 STATES

NEW STUDY EXPLAINS WHY NEARLY 20 PERCENT OF ELECTRIC CAR OWNERS RETURN TO GAS

EXTREMELY RARE ANIMAL CAUGHT AND PHOTOGRAPHED BY FISHERMAN

Ghiraheem on May 12nd, 2021 at 05:28 UTC »

Two things about this for those that didn't read the article:

They didn't release them all at once. It says they have released 1000 feral cats since 2012. So over the course of almost a decade 1000 cats have been released.

All the cats they released are spayed/neutered so as a result they won't contribute to a "cat explosion" of population

Edit: As a few have commented, it's also worth noting that they are not just released as strays. They are placed under the care of approved local business and property owners as "working cats" where they are provided food and shelter and otherwise cared for as needed.

louisdeer on May 12nd, 2021 at 03:18 UTC »

They need owls.

NicxtLevelGaming on May 12nd, 2021 at 01:26 UTC »

Well that headline is a little misleading...they haven’t released 1,000 cars onto the streets.

Its a program that places them with home and business owners and its 1,000 cats since 2012...