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Setting up SoCal kittens for success

Updated: Apr 25, 2023


Since 2016, the Helen Sanders Cat Protection and Welfare Society (CatPAWS) has been building and supplying kitten kits to Long Beach Animal Care Services (LBACS) in Los Angeles County.


Deborah Felin, CatPAWS co-founder and board member, says the kits (costing $55 to $60 each) consist of plastic bins filled with powdered formula, bottles, syringes with miracle nipples, a tube of the probiotic Benebac and a warming disk or hot water bottle with a fleece cover. They also come with a guide on how to care for kittens that haven’t yet been weaned and a list of online resources.

“Having these kits on hand has led LBCAS to be very successful at encouraging the public to foster kittens,” she says. “Best of all, people become so invested that many kittens are adopted by their foster families or to friends. They never come back to the shelter at all.”

“Shelters have really shifted their mindset around whether they need to take in every kitten,” says Kaylee Hawkins, Best Friends Pacific region director. “They realize that they haven’t been able to provide the support and lifesaving outcomes they would like.”

Kaylee says that COVID has made people realize that they actually can lean on the community to a degree that animal shelters have not historically been comfortable with. “If we just ask people for help, they often say yes. Kitten kits are a simple but effective tool that can be part of that ask.”



The success of the kitten kits inspired Best Friends to present CatPAWS with a $50,000 grant to build enough kits to help 1,800 kittens from the beginning of 2021 to the middle of 2022. (The target figure was based on the average litter size of three kittens.) Those funds allowed the organization to expand beyond just supplying LBCAS, and now kits are also being provided to Orange County Animal Care Services, Los Angeles County Animal Care and Control and SEAACA.

LBACS director Staycee Dains says that during a Zoom call many shelter directors showed interest as she spoke about the success of her program.

“It may surprise some people to learn that shelters in the same state, county or even city may not frequently connect,” Staycee says. “With COVID, shelters throughout Los Angeles County began meeting monthly to share strategies about how they were navigating the mandatory closures. Naturally, the conversation turned to kittens and everyone started to realize that they could successfully change the way they work with kittens in their communities.”


Denise Woodside, executive director of SEAACA says: “Kitten programs that enlist the community as a solution are a proven model that has an incredibly positive impact on the feline population, on shelter staff and on members of the community. It’s past time that shelters stop being afraid of enlisting the public in saving these littlest lives.”

Based on her recent positive experience, Dawn is hoping her shelter will do just that. “I always wondered why people who cared enough to bring these absolutely adorable babies to us wouldn’t want to take care of them,” she says. “As it turns out, they do. We just never asked.”

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