You are right "Moss Road". I have been to my local humane shelter and they wont take any strays, and they raised such a fuss about the local county shelter killing them that they stopped and wont take cats either. There are 3 more wild strays in my area that are wild. I know they are just trying to survive, but with no rabies shots, they pose a threat to out cats, not to mention they come in and sneak food, (I guess I can't blame them for that) but one of them is a tom and sprays the feeding area. So they might be going to cat haven if I cant find a solution. The humane shelter and city shelter now has cameras outside so you cant drop them off after hours. I feel that the agency's are failing their duty to humanely kill them and threaten to jail us country people if we kill one. I am not in the killing business and take no pleasure in it.
Our local Humane Society takes all animals. They do their best to be a no-kill shelter. If the cat is adoptable, they try their best. They have several hundred at any given time. Plus, I think they answer something like 14,000 animal calls per year in our county. And that's the county, not the largest city in the county, which has its own animal control agency. They have drop boxes built into the wall of their building. You can drive up after hours and put the animal in the box. Unfortunately, that one is a kill shelter. They try to adopt out, but if an animal is there for more than a few days, there's a good chance its put down. And God help you if your pet gets loose and they get a hold of it. They don't have a good record of contacting owners even when the animal is micro-chipped. The city used to contract with the humane society, but someone saw a chance to do some kingdom building and now they have this and a bunch of city employees they have to pay benefits to. It was political.
Our local Pet Refuge tries to take all animals, but if they are out of room, they ask you to keep it until they have room, which ends up being a very long time. They are a no-kill shelter. We adopted a 10 year old cat from them last year. My wife called me 5 minutes ago... he just crapped in my bedroom.

Thanks, buddy. :laughing:
There are a few private homes that act as overflows for the Pet Refuge. They are full as well.
I'll mention that most of the "refuge" places are full of unrealistic crazy cat ladies that deny the damage cats do to wildlife. They just rammed a trap, neuter/spay, release law through the city and got them to eliminate the number of cats you can have in your house. And they passed something like a cat heard caretaker ordinance, which is pretty much just a legalization of crazy cat ladies activities to let the wild cats roam the neighborhoods. As long as you keep the cats spayed and neutered, and sort of attempt to get them rabies vaccinations, as long as you feed them, you can have dozens roaming your property. Its not a good thing.
Of course, the main problem is people that let cats breed, and let cats roam outdoors. If we could figure out how to reduce that, we wouldn't need shelters at all.
