Our agenda

Five solutions Georgia must act on.

Specific. Proven. Fiscally responsible. Bipartisan. Each one attacks the crisis at its source instead of paying for it forever downstream.

1

Vastly increase spay/neuter funding — through a direct appropriationTop priority

Georgia's Dog & Cat Sterilization Program is funded by specialty license-plate sales and voluntary tax check-offs, not a line in the budget. We're asking the General Assembly to fund prevention directly and competitively — a cost-neutral investment that pays for itself many times over. The model already exists next door: in 2025 Texas appropriated $13 million over two years (TxSNP), sending money straight to surgery providers — shelters, rescues, clinics, and government agencies. We want Georgia to start here, with a program for rescues and shelters first.

2

Subsidize spay/neuter for low-income Georgians

Not everyone lives near a rescue or a low-cost clinic. The second step is a voucher or credit program that brings surgery costs toward zero for qualifying families statewide — reaching individuals directly, not just organizations. Poverty and pet overpopulation travel together, and access, not willingness, is the real barrier.

3

Recognize that TNVR is not animal abandonment

Trap-neuter-vaccinate-return is the most cost-effective tool to stop outdoor cat population growth, but Georgia law leaves it in a gray area. A clear state-level definition lets counties and volunteers legally sterilize and return free-roaming community cats. Texas resolved this exact question in 2023 with House Bill 3660, which created a clean legal defense for returning TNVR cats.

4

Stronger laws against illegal breeding & abandonment

Meaningful penalties for illegal breeding and abandonment, and an animal-abuse tracking database like Florida's. This isn't only about animals: since 2016 the FBI has tracked animal cruelty alongside murder, arson, and assault, and uses it to identify people at risk of harming others.

5

A statewide public education campaign

Sustained, funded messaging on responsible pet ownership and the value of spay/neuter. Culture change across 159 counties can't run on volunteer social posts alone — it needs real, ongoing investment to shift behavior.

Why prevention

One surgery today prevents a flood tomorrow.

The math is what makes this a fiscal issue, not just a compassionate one.

Start — 1 unspayed cat
1
Year 1
12 cats
Year 2
60 cats
Year 3
300+ cats
~$70

The cost of one spay surgery that prevents this entire chain.

$1 → $20

Return on every prevention dollar over ten years (Minnesota fiscal study).

"Turn off the faucet — fund surgeries, not bureaucracy."

Texas invested $13M and projects a 30–40% euthanasia cut within five years. New Hampshire chose prevention thirty years ago. The model is proven. Georgia can copy it.

Help make it happen