TRENTON, NJ – A Senate proposal would require most cats leaving shelters or rescues to be spayed or neutered and would fund trap-neuter-return (TNR) programs for free-roaming cats.
Senate Bill 261, pre-filed for the 2024 session, is sponsored by Sen. Brian P. Stack with Sens. Diegnan, Cryan, Turner, and Johnson as co-sponsors.
The measure is designated the Compassion for Community Cats Law.
The bill creates a Department of Health fund supported by fees and penalties to grant municipalities and counties money for humane trapping, sterilization, ear-tipping, rabies vaccination, and return of community cats.
Mandatory sterilization before adoption, with narrow exceptions
Shelters, pounds, kennels operating as shelters, and animal rescue organization facilities could not release cats for adoption unless a licensed veterinarian has spayed or neutered the animal.
Exemptions cover cats under two months old, animals a veterinarian deems unfit for surgery, and cats placed in foster care or transferred to another licensed facility as specified. Facilities may charge adopters the cost of sterilization, and violations carry a civil penalty of up to $1,000 per cat, with proceeds deposited into the new fund.
“Community cat” is defined as a free-roaming cat with no known owner, whether socialized or fearful of humans, that may or may not receive care from a person. Shelters are not required to hold a community cat before sterilizing, ear-tipping, vaccinating against rabies, and returning it to the capture site.
Program funding and administration
The “Compassion for Community Cats Fund” would receive the existing $0.20 dog license surcharge (redirected from a prior program), civil penalties, legislative appropriations, and investment returns, and DOH may not use fund dollars for departmental administrative costs.
DOH may adopt rules to implement grants and compliance. Animal control officers must place impounded animals only with licensed shelters or pounds; licensed shelters may later place animals with rescues or fosters under statutory timelines.
Sale or release of impounded animals for experimentation remains prohibited and is a fourth-degree crime.
Owners reclaiming cats or dogs must provide proof of ownership and may be charged for requested sterilization and up to $4 per day for care.
Animal Population Control Program changes
The law updates the Animal Population Control Program to emphasize permanent sterilization and includes community cat caregivers as eligible participants. Eligibility includes SNAP, SSI, WIC, Work First New Jersey or General Assistance, Medicaid, PAAD or Senior Gold, Section 8 or State Rental Assistance, Lifeline, Tenants’ Lifeline, and LIHEAP.
Participants pay a $10 fee into the Animal Population Control Fund; veterinarians are reimbursed 80% of sterilization fees from the fund.
Reimbursements up to $10 apply to core dog and cat immunizations and add rabies vaccination for community cats.
Community cats sterilized through the program must also be ear-tipped and vaccinated against rabies.
Additional updates and repealers
Statutory definitions are updated to exclude community cat caregivers from the definition of “owner” and to add “community cat” and “community cat caregiver” across affected sections.The State Board of Veterinary Medical Examiners may continue limited continuing-education offsets for volunteer services, including TNR work, with written attestation that cats have no known owner.Sections 3 and 4 of P.L.2011, c.142 (Pet Sterilization Pilot Program) are repealed. The act takes effect immediately.
The Compassion for Community Cats Law would mandate sterilization before adoption, fund municipal TNR programs, expand aid eligibility, and update shelter and veterinary provisions statewide.