ABOUT US
T-Town TNR Mission
T-Town TNR’s mission is to help make Tulsa a healthier place by working with local neighborhoods, businesses, and other animal welfare organizations to humanely manage Tulsa's unowned cat population, with a focus on spay/neuter.
Trap-Neuter-Vaccinate-Return (TNVR) is a proven effective approach to cat population management. More and more cities are embracing TNVR and have been very successful, including Oklahoma City, OK; Houston, TX; Cleveland, OH; Jacksonville, FL; Atlantic City, NJ; Washington DC; Albuquerque, NM; San Antonio, TX; Philadelphia, PA; DeKalb County, GA; Baltimore, MD; and Salt Lake City, UT. In addition, the entire state of Virginia endorses TNVR, as well as many cities in other countries, including Canada, Italy, Greece, the UK and Spain.
Who we are: T-Town TNR is made up of a group of volunteers dedicated to the mission of resolving Tulsa’s feline overpopulation crisis in a humane way through Trap-Neuter-Return. We are available to assist City of Tulsa property owners and cat caretakers who are committed to maintaining the community cats with Trap-Neuter-Return.
What we do: Using internationally practiced protocols, community cats are humanely caught with box or drop traps, taken to a veterinarian to be spayed or neutered, vaccinated and eartipped, then returned to their outdoor home. The eartip is the universal sign that a community cat has been neutered and vaccinated and is being cared for by those in the community.
Since 2015, T-Town TNR has worked with those in the community to spay or neuter, vaccinate and return more than 5,000 community cats.
Who we are: T-Town TNR is made up of a group of volunteers dedicated to the mission of resolving Tulsa’s feline overpopulation crisis in a humane way through Trap-Neuter-Return. We are available to assist City of Tulsa property owners and cat caretakers who are committed to maintaining the community cats with Trap-Neuter-Return.
What we do: Using internationally practiced protocols, community cats are humanely caught with box or drop traps, taken to a veterinarian to be spayed or neutered, vaccinated and eartipped, then returned to their outdoor home. The eartip is the universal sign that a community cat has been neutered and vaccinated and is being cared for by those in the community.
Since 2015, T-Town TNR has worked with those in the community to spay or neuter, vaccinate and return more than 5,000 community cats.
Alley Cat Allies - Click on the below image for resources