Find the Purr-fect Coworker
Working Cats
Need a Helping Paw?
Employ A Working Cat
Adoption Basics
Adding A Furry Colleague To The Team
Even though their adoption may be a little different than house cats, we are just as committed to finding them safe homes and helping adopters set these cats up for success.
What We Provide
- Free adoptions
- Spay or neuter surgery
- Ear tipping
- Rabies vaccine
- Microchip
What Adopters Provide
- Safe and warm shelter
- Daily food and water
- Veterinary care when needed for illness or injury
FAQs
A working cat is a cat that is not social enough to be adopted out as a house cat but not able to be returned to their original outdoor home due to a safety or health concern. These cats are then placed up for adoption as working cats to be outdoor companions for those with barns, businesses, or any expanse of land that may need a helper hunting for mice.
The cats available for Working Cat adoption at the York County SPCA have experienced some hardship before reaching this point. These cats were originally brought in through our SNR (shelter, neuter, return) Program due to illness or injury and are unable to return to their original outdoor home due to health or safety concerns, such as a neighbor threatening harm or a chronic illness that requires the cat to have a caretaker. We nurse these cats back to health, make sure they are spayed/ neutered, ear-tip them as a universal indicator of being altered, provide a rabies vaccine, and microchip them. These special cats then wait at the shelter until we can find them a Working Cat placement.
Working cats need a ‘home base’ where they can get fully away from the outdoors and receive daily food and fresh water. These types of shelters include barns, sheds, warehouses, shops, and greenhouses.
Anyone who is looking for an outside cat companion and has an adequate shelter the cat can call ‘home base’ can adopt a working cat. There are no fees to adopt a working cat, and they are spayed/ neutered, ear-tipped, rabies vaccinated, and microchipped before they go home.
The first step to adopting a working cat is to complete an adoption questionnaire. If you have a neighbor close by, you may want to discuss with them first that you are considering adopting a working cat, so they are not surprised if they see a new cat roaming the area. We suggest adopting working cats in multiples as it will be easier for the cat to adjust to their new environment with a companion.
We do not conduct meets and greets for working cat candidates as they are not social house cats. This means they would not do well in a typical meet and greet setting and would cause unnecessary stress to the cat. During the working cat adoption process, we give you basic details and photos of eligible cats for you to choose from.
The acclimation process for working cats can take anywhere from 2-6 weeks. The longer the cat is quarantined, the better the chances are that they will not disappear from your property when released.
During the 2–6 week acclimation period, the cat should be confined to an area that will be their home base. This could be a room in a barn, a shed, a large dog crate, etc. You will be responsible for feeding the cat on a daily basis and cleaning the litter box. This also helps the cat to associate you with food and not to perceive you as a threat.
The acclimation period ensures that once the cat is released from their quarantine area, they will spend the majority of their time in the area that has become familiar to them over that time period. If you need help setting up an adequate quarantine area, the YCSPCA can deliver the working cats to your home and help set you up for success.
Mission Moment
Happy Tails
The process of making Acorn a member of our family couldn't have been easier with the staff at YCSPCA.
Acorn enjoys roaming our small farm and keeping the rodent population in check, plus getting a lot of attention from our family and passers on the Rail Trail!
Acorn is not only living the dream, but he even made a new best friend. He takes his job seriously as working cat and family pet, which includes walking his human siblings to the school bus.
Sean
Acorn's Adopter