The Nova Scotia SPCA is currently struggling financially to care for 26 of 66 cats who have a variety of health issues rescued from a Yarmouth County man’s home.
“Unfortunately, they’re all infested with lice. So that’s kind of added a different complexity to this situation that we don’t normally have,” said Sandra Flemming, the organization’s provincial director of animal care, at
the the provincial animal shelter located in Dartmouth on Friday.
The cats most in need of medical attention are being cared for in shelters throughout the province. Their owner has since gotten enough food to feed the rest cats until the SPCA takes them from him, a process happening in chunks.
The man, who is not being identified at this time, isn’t able to afford to care for his clowder of cats. He approached the SPCA back in November, 2015 with his problem.
He will not face charges.
“They did do the right thing in reaching out for help. We wish that they could have done it a lot sooner. We wouldn’t have had so many, and perhaps the condition of the cats would have been a little bit better,” said Joanne Landsburg, the SPCA’s chief provincial inspector.
“Had the organization not stepped in, the 66 could have expanded to over 100 by this summer,” she said.
“It’s not something that’s unusual in Nova Scotia,” said Landsburg, adding that the organization may receive multiple calls for similar situations a year. “People think that, you know, brothers and sisters won’t mate – they will.”
She said spaying and neutering pets could have prevented this.
Landsburg said that the intake of these cats is putting a “huge financial burden on the SPCA.”
The cats have to be shaved and isolated in room to prevent lice from spreading.
They are also suffering from various dental problems. Some are so underweight, they’ll have to gain a bit more weight before they can be fully treated by veterinarians.
Their treatment is costing between $400-600 apiece, which Flemming estimated could add up to a total of about $30,000.
h“Our adoption fee is only around $160, so we’re not coming anywhere close to recouping the majority of the costs associated with these animals,” she said, also stressing that her organization is not funded by the government.
If people are interested in helping the SPCA, financial donations are of particular need right now, she added.

The cost to treat all of the cats could cost up to $30,000, according to a Nova Scotia SPCA spokesperson.
The cats are being made put up for adoption as they get healthy; only five have been adopted as of Friday.