• Ep 670: Bridging the Gap Between Vets and Community Cat Caregivers with Dr. Kevin Lynch, DVM, Veterinarian, Author, and Founder of The Moriches Hospital for Animals
    Jun 23 2026

    "That's my own formula — passion and compassion tempered by dedication and humor."

    This episode is sponsored-in-part by Maddie's Fund, OcuTrap, and Drop Traps: Beginning and Advanced Certification Workshop.

    After more than five decades behind the exam table, Dr. Kevin Lynch has treated thousands of pets, mentored generations of veterinary staff, and built one of Long Island's longest-running animal hospitals. His new memoir, Off the Leash: Tales From a Lifetime of Healing Pets and Wonder, traces that journey from a 13-year-old kid who talked his way into a part-time job at a local animal hospital to a veterinarian whose guiding philosophy is simple: treating the animal is only half the work, and tending to the person on the other end of the leash is the rest.

    Dr. Lynch and Stacy dig into one of the thorniest debates in animal welfare: the divide between "indoor-only" advocates and the realities of outdoor and community cat caregiving. Drawing on his own farm-cat memories from working summers on a dairy farm before vet school, he makes the case for listening over judging, and for meeting cat caregivers where they are instead of where a textbook says they should be. From there, the conversation turns practical: how should trappers and community cat program managers actually approach a veterinarian for the first time? Dr. Lynch's answer centers on intention, relationship-building, and showing up with a plan rather than a crisis.

    The episode also gets personal. Dr. Lynch opens up about compassion fatigue and burnout, a topic he says is as urgent in veterinary medicine today as it's ever been, and shares the daily habits, including a deliberately disciplined relationship with his phone, that keep him from burning out after 51 years in practice. He and Stacy also revisit one of the most harrowing chapters of his career: volunteering with search-and-rescue dogs at Ground Zero after 9/11, an experience he says revealed both the depths of tragedy and the best of human nature.

    Rounding out the conversation, Dr. Lynch shares a few of the stories from his book, including an unforgettable lesson in slowing down before attempting a DIY tick removal. He also talks about where listeners can find his memoir, his YouTube series The Pet Mindset Show, and the dental care device he invented for dogs and cats.

    Press Play Now For:

    • How a 13-year-old's unpaid job at a Long Island animal hospital turned into a 51-year veterinary career
    • Dr. Lynch's perspective on the indoor-only versus outdoor/community cat debate, and why he believes there's no one-size-fits-all answer
    • His honest advice for trappers and caregivers on how to approach a veterinarian for the first time
    • Why showing up with "a plan" rather than a crisis is the fastest way to build trust with a vet
    • The role of compassion fatigue and burnout in veterinary medicine, and the daily habits that help him stay in the game
    • His "physical mailbox" approach to managing phone use and protecting mental bandwidth
    • A first-hand account of volunteering with search-and-rescue dogs at Ground Zero after 9/11
    • The story behind a Rottweiler named Big Shot, and the unexpected humanity he witnessed during that crisis
    • Two unforgettable cat stories from his memoir, including a lesson in patience before attempting DIY pet care
    • Where to find his memoir, his YouTube series, and the dental device he invented for pets

    Resources & Links

    • Off the Leash: Tales From a Lifetime of Healing Pets and Wonder (Amazon)
    • Dr. Kevin Lynch's website
    • The Pet Mindset Show (YouTube)
    • Plaque Be Gone dental device
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    28 mins
  • Ep 669: 10 Years of Community Cats Podcast: A Conversation with Stacy, Kristen, and Mike
    Jun 16 2026
    "We may not all be the same organization, but we all have a very similar goal, and that is a better world for cats ultimately." This episode is sponsored-in-part by Maddie's Fund, OcuTrap, and Drop Traps: Beginning and Advanced Certification Workshop. To celebrate the 10-year anniversary of the Community Cats Podcast, host Stacy LeBaron is joined by Kristen Petrie, Community Cats Central's Technical Tabby, and frequent guest/guest host Mike Phillips of the Urban Cat League in New York City. Rather than a traditional interview, this episode is a candid conversation about the podcast's journey, the evolution of the community cat movement, and what they see on the horizon. Press Play Now For: How the podcast launched with a five-day-a-week release schedule — and why that was, in retrospect, wildly ambitiousThe evolution from a podcast into a broader educational platform, including the TNR certification workshops that have now certified over 6,000 community cat advocatesThe Community Cat Pyramid — why it became a turning point for the podcast and the movement, and how it reframes the conversation around owned cats as the upstream source of community cat populationsA frank look at the veterinary access crisis: why affordable spay/neuter remains the most critical variable in population management, and what's shifting in the private practice landscape (including the potential move away from corporate ownership back toward independent practices)The Community Cat Clinics in the Atlanta area as a model for independently owned, cat-focused veterinary practices — and how to connect with co-owner Rick DuCharme if you're curious about replicating itThe cost equation: why trap-hold-euthanize approaches are far more expensive than upstream spay/neuter investment, and how to make that case clearly to decision-makersAdvocacy strategy — including the elevator pitch, tailoring your message to your audience (a politician needs to hear "1,000 voters"; a neighbor who dislikes cats needs to hear about the vacuum effect), and the power of consistent, simple messagingThe Georgia Whole Cat Workshop — bringing community cat players together for a full-day hybrid strategic sessionThe Summerlee Sustainable Solutions Grant Program— an eight-week course through the University of the Pacific paired with $4,000–$8,000 in seed funding for pilot projectsWhat the future looks like: less hierarchy, more collaboration, and community members stepping up to answer each other's questions Resources & Links Community Cat PyramidCommunity Cat CalculatorPaper Collar TemplateCommunity Cat Clinic — email stacy@communitycatscentral.com to connect with Rick DuCharme for a virtual or in-person tourPrevious CCP episodes with Rick DuCharme: Episode 416 on YouTube | Episode 545 on YouTubeUrban Cat League — including the Taming Toolkit with Mike's socializing feral cats video resourcesVoters for Animal Rights (New York)Summerlee Sustainable Solutions Grant Program — through United Spay AllianceUnited Spay Alliance
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    41 mins
  • Ep 668: City Kitties: Inside New York's Bodega Cat Movement, with Dan Rimada, Founder of Bodega Cats of New York and Co-Founder of Cats About Town Tours
    Jun 9 2026

    "You can both celebrate them and advocate for them at the same time."

    This episode is sponsored-in-part by Maddie's Fund, OcuTrap, and Drop Traps: Beginning and Advanced Certification Workshop.

    Dan Rimada didn't set out to start a movement. He just started noticing cats. During the stillness of COVID, when New York City slowed down enough to actually look around, he began noticing the cats living in the bodegas of his Fort Greene, Brooklyn neighborhood and photographing them on his iPhone. What began as a hyper-local Instagram project quickly grew into something much larger — a citywide archive, an advocacy platform, a walking tour company, and now a forthcoming book. Today, Bodega Cats of New York is the most detailed documentation of working cats in New York City corner stores ever assembled, built on four years of relationship-building across all five boroughs.

    At the heart of Dan's work is a real tension: bodega cats are beloved New York City cultural icons — neighborhood anchors, pest controllers, familiar faces — and they are technically illegal. Under current New York City Health Code, keeping a live animal in a food establishment can result in fines between $200 and $1,500. Dan's 14,000-signature petition changed that conversation. It led to City Council legislation that would eliminate those fines and fund spay/neuter and vaccinations for bodega cats — with Council Member Frank Morano now carrying the bill forward after Keith Powers was term-limited out. A parallel state-level bill, introduced by Assembly Member Linda Rosenthal, goes further, establishing official care standards: designated cat zones, clean water, nutritious food, rest areas, and mandatory spay/neuter. The two bills are designed to work in tandem.

    Dan also co-founded Cats About Town Tours with cat historian Peggy Gavan, whose blog hatchingcatnyc.com and books on New York City's animal history made her the perfect partner. The tours run through Brooklyn Heights, the Lower East Side, and the Financial District, uncovering the hidden feline history of New York from the 1800s and 1900s — and every ticket sold triggers food donations to a 501(c)(3) cat rescue. His book, Bodega Cats of New York, featuring photography by Gulce Kilkis, arrives from Quarto Publishing in October 2026.

    Press Play Now For:

    • How a COVID-era iPhone project in Fort Greene grew into New York City's most comprehensive bodega cat archive
    • What a bodega actually is — and why working cats have been part of that culture for generations
    • Why bodega cats are currently illegal under NYC Health Code, and what the legislation would change
    • The two-pronged legislative strategy: the city council bill and the state-level Assembly bill, and how they work together
    • How Dan's $7,400 fundraiser and 14,000-signature petition translated into real legislative action
    • The spay/neuter and vaccination funding mechanism proposed in the city bill — and where the money could come from
    • Why some rescue groups want an outright ban on bodega cats, and Dan's more pragmatic take
    • The story behind Cats About Town Tours and the hidden cat history woven into New York City's streets
    • What to expect from the Bodega Cats of New York book, coming October 2026

    Resources & Links

    • Bodega Cats of New York — Dan's archive, advocacy updates, and book waitlist at bodegacatsofnewyork.com
    • @bodegacatsofnewyork on Instagram
    • Cats About Town Tours — NYC's cat history walking tours, running April through November
    • The Hatching Cat of Gotham — Peggy Gavan's blog on the history of cats (and dogs) in New York City
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    27 mins
  • Ep 667: Building the Prevention Layer Animal Welfare Has Been Missing, with BJ Adkins, Founder and Director of Animal Angels Foundation
    Jun 2 2026

    "With animal welfare, we're basically waiting till the roof falls in — when the animals are at the shelter, that's the roof falling in. We have to catch them earlier."

    This episode is sponsored-in-part by Maddie's Fund, OcuTrap, and The Kitten Conference.

    What if the animal welfare system stopped waiting for families to walk through the shelter door — and started showing up before they ever got there? That's the question driving BJ Adkins, disabled veteran and founder of Animal Angels Foundation (AAF), a prevention-first nonprofit serving seven counties in central Alabama.

    After years of fostering and watching intake numbers refuse to budge, BJ decided to stop patching the system and start rebuilding its missing layer. AAF isn't a rescue organization. It's prevention infrastructure: programs designed to solve the problems that force pet surrender before surrender ever becomes an option.

    Those programs include SNIP, a spay/neuter assistance initiative with a $100 stipend for income-qualifying owners; The Bridge, which addresses the financial and housing barriers that most often precede surrender; Finder-to-Foster; Adoption Boost; Landlord Partnership; and Sniff and Greet. Connecting it all is the Animal Welfare Resource Network (AWRN) — a shared technology platform that replaces organizational silos with real-time coordination across shelters, rescues, vet clinics, and community partners. Three participation levels and no cost to join means even change-resistant organizations can get on board.

    To measure what's working, BJ is partnering with a University of Tennessee researcher to build the evidence base for prevention-first animal welfare — while already fielding calls from Colorado, Tennessee, and the Canadian SPCA. The data is being collected. The network is growing. And if BJ has anything to say about it, the roof won't have to fall in anymore.

    Press Play Now For:

    • Why BJ compares the current animal welfare system to waiting for the roof to fall in — and what "upstream" intervention actually looks like
    • A breakdown of AAF's six core programs and how each one targets a specific point of failure before shelter intake
    • How the Animal Welfare Resource Network (AWRN) replaces organizational silos with a shared, real-time coordination platform
    • The SNIP program's $100 stipend model and why removing financial friction matters for low-income pet owners
    • BJ's strategy for bringing change-resistant organizations into the network — with three levels of participation and no cost to join
    • How AAF is partnering with University of Tennessee researchers to build a data-driven case for prevention programs
    • Practical advice for new nonprofit founders: research first, build relationships, and find the gap nobody else is filling

    Resources & Links

    • Animal Angels Foundation Website
    • Animal Welfare Resource Network (AWRN)
    • Maddie's Pet Forum (where Stacy and BJ connected)
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    17 mins
  • Ep 666: Holistic Health for Community Cats - What Nature Already Provides with Angela Ardolino Certified Cannabis & Fungi Clinician and Founder of MycoDog, MycoCat & CBD Dog Health
    May 26 2026

    "Mother Nature provides us with all the food and medicine that we need. Food is medicine — and it is the number one thing you can do for any person or animal to help them stay healthy and help their immune system operate."

    This episode is sponsored-in-part by Maddie's Fund, OcuTrap, and The Kitten Conference.

    What if the best medicine for your community cats isn't found in a bottle — but in a bowl? In this episode, host Stacy LeBaron sits down with Angela Ardolino, a certified cannabis and fungi clinician with over 20 years of expertise in holistic pet wellness and founder of MycoDog, MycoCat, and CBD Dog Health.

    Angela's path to holistic animal care began with her own recovery from rheumatoid arthritis using plants, mushrooms, and diet — which led her to discover that every animal shares an endocannabinoid system, the body's master regulatory system. With no quality animal products on the market, she spent two years formulating and testing full-spectrum hemp extract and medicinal mushroom tinctures at her rescue farm before bringing them to the public.

    Stacy and Angela dig into the real cost of kibble — not just financially, but biologically — and make the case for real food, even in small increments, for both owned cats and colony cats. Angela also offers practical guidance on supporting senior and geriatric cats with full-spectrum hemp extract, how to spot trustworthy supplements (look for a COA), and why the endocannabinoid system is the key to keeping cats healthy from the inside out.

    Press Play Now For:

    • Why kibble is the wrong foundation for feline health — and practical, budget-friendly alternatives for pet owners and colony caregivers alike
    • How the endocannabinoid system works in all animals and why supporting it is key to preventing disease
    • How to administer full-spectrum hemp extract to cats you can touch — and cats you can't
    • Why 85% of supplements on the market (for pets and humans alike) aren't worth buying, and how to identify the ones that are
    • When a cat becomes a "senior" vs. a "geriatric" — and why that distinction matters for their care
    • The feline grimace scale, telehealth options, and emerging tools that help caregivers monitor cats without a vet visit
    • A vision for mobile veterinary care that extends to colony sites, not just indoor pets

    Resources & Links

    • Angela Ardolino's Website
    • CBD Dog Health
    • MycoDog
    • Your Natural Dog Podcast
    • Follow Angela on Instagram
    • Follow Angela on Facebook
    • Follow Your Natural Dog on Instagram
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    29 mins
  • Ep 665: From One to Many: Building a Neighborhood-Based Community Cat Program with Tonya Cook, Community Cat Program Manager at Ohio Alleycat Resource
    May 19 2026

    "When we look at things on a neighborhood level and we're noticing patterns, noticing new colonies — when something's predictable, it's preventable."

    This episode is sponsored-in-part by Maddie's Fund, OcuTrap, and The Kitten Conference.

    What does it look like to build a community cat program from scratch — not just logistically, but with real intention about how change happens in a neighborhood? In this episode, Stacy LeBaron speaks with Tonya Cook, Community Cat Program Manager at Ohio Alleycat Resource (OAR) in Cincinnati, about her remarkable journey from neonatal kitten foster to full-time community cat advocate, and what she's learned about scaling impact when you're a team of one.

    Tonya's path into animal welfare began in 2020 when she started fostering neonatal kittens with Cincinnati Animal CARE. Night feedings and fragile lives gave her a front-row seat to how many kittens were being born outside — and how few resources existed to stop the cycle at the source. That question drove her toward TNR and, ultimately, toward a complete career change. In 2022, she left behind 15 years as a professional photographer to pursue animal welfare full-time, gaining hands-on experience at UCAN and Cincinnati Animal CARE before joining OAR in 2025 to build its community cat program from the ground up.

    In its pilot year, that program has facilitated the TNR of over 400 cats — most of them trapped by Tonya herself, two days a week, before she recognized the limits of that approach. When burnout began to set in, she did something harder than trapping: she stepped back. That decision led to the creation of OAR's Neighborhood Cat Ambassador Program, which embeds trained volunteers directly into high-need zip codes identified through shelter and rescue data. Ambassadors walk their streets, distribute flyers with QR codes linking to a community cat census, connect caregivers to resources, mediate neighbor disputes, and trap for those who can't. The result is a program that feels less like a service and more like a movement — and one that's bringing neighbors together in the process.

    Tonya also shares an inspiring story from a mobile home park 20 miles outside Cincinnati, where she spent last spring trapping 58 cats. Earlier this year, the park reached back out — not to ask for help, but to learn how to do it themselves. They've since purchased their own traps, gone door to door, posted on social media, and started bringing cats in weekly. That's the long game Tonya is playing: not just TNR, but teaching communities to sustain the work themselves.

    Press Play Now For:

    • How fostering neonatal kittens led Tonya to TNR — and a complete career change
    • Why Tonya insisted on doing the work herself first before bringing in volunteers, and what she learned from that approach.
    • The story of Sonny, the neighborhood cat who introduced a whole street of strangers to each other
    • How OAR's Neighborhood Cat Ambassador Program works, who it recruits, and why ambassadors stay engaged longer than traditional trapping volunteers
    • A mobile home park success story: from one organization doing the work to a community sustaining TNR on their own
    • Why "when something's predictable, it's preventable" is the mindset shift that defines neighborhood-based cat management
    • How to find common ground with neighbors who hate cats and neighbors who love them

    Resources & Links

    • Ohio Alleycat Resource (OAR) — Website
    • OAR Community Cat Program
    • OAR on Instagram (@ohioalleycat)
    • OAR on Facebook
    • Tonya Cook on Instagram (@cincycatlady)
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    24 mins
  • Ep 664: When the Uh-Oh Happens: Pet First Aid and CPR for Every Cat Caregiver with Arden Moore, America's Pet Health and Safety Coach
    May 12 2026
    "If you wanna have a real superpower, learn cat first aid." This episode is sponsored-in-part by Maddie's Fund, OcuTrap, and Strategies to Reunite Lost Cats with Families Certification Workshop and Increasing Your Impact With Targeted TNR Certification Workshop. Cats are both predator and prey — and that dual nature means they respond to emergencies unlike any other animal. They have five weapons of mass destruction, a flexible spine, and no apologies. When the uh-oh happens, are you ready? In this episode, Stacy sits down with Arden Moore, bestselling author, host of the longest-running pet podcast on the planet, and founder of Pet First Aid 4 U, to talk about what every cat caregiver — whether you're a TNR volunteer, a shelter worker, a foster, or a pet parent — needs to know when a cat is in crisis. Arden draws on 15 years as a master certified pet first aid and CPR instructor to break down how to safely approach an injured or unconscious cat, the right way to perform two-handed CPR (and yes, even kitten CPR), how to transport an injured cat without spiking their fear and stress, and what to keep in your car and home to be truly safety-ready. Stacy and Arden also talk about why community cats present a unique challenge — and how many of the same skills transfer directly to TNR work in the field. You'll also hear about the surprising void in veterinary education around pet first aid, why even vets have frozen during a pet emergency, and how Arden's famous sidekick, Pet Safety Cat Casey — a shelter alum from San Diego Humane Society who stole the show at the Virginia Cat Festival with over 350 people in the room — makes learning these life-saving skills both practical and fun. Stacy and Arden are proud partners through the Community Cats Central e-learning platform, where group packages allow organizations to get their entire teams certified together. If your group of 10 wants to watch, learn, and get individually certified, this is the course for you. Less than 5% of pet owners have ever taken a pet first aid class. That's a big void — and this episode is your invitation to fill it. Press Play Now For: Why cats in emergencies are nothing like small dogs — and how to adjust your approach for their unique physiology and stress responsesHow to perform one- and two-handed CPR on a cat, including two-finger CPR for neonatal kittensThe kitty Heimlich, safe towel-wrapping technique, and the right way to use a top-loading carrier for transportWhat to keep in your car and home for a pet first aid kit — and when to check it (hint: sync it with clock changes)Why TNR caregivers are uniquely positioned to respond to field emergencies, and why a transfer cage may be better than a carrierThe ASPCA Poison Control and Pet Poison Helpline as 24/7 resources for toxic ingestionsWhy you should always call ahead to the vet — and put your hazards on during transportHow Arden's "Arden's Army" of 500+ certified instructors is spreading life-saving skills across shelters, rescues, vet clinics, and beyondHow to become a certified pet first aid instructor yourself through the ProPet Hero instructor programHow the Community Cat Central / Pet First Aid 4 U partnership works, including group certification packages Resources & Links Pet First Aid 4 UArden Moore's WebsiteOh Behave! Podcast on Pet Life RadioProPet Hero Instructor TrainingArden Moore on YouTubeArden Moore on InstagramArden Moore on FacebookASPCA Animal Poison Control Center (888) 426-4435, available 24/7Pet Poison Helpline (855) 764-7661, available 24/7
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    27 mins
  • Ep 663: Kitten Season Is Coming: What the Data Says and What to Do About It with Tori Fugate, Director of SAC Communications for the ASPCA
    May 5 2026
    "If we all came together to solve the problem, to solve the issue, and work together — those are the areas that we would see the most improvement." This episode is sponsored-in-part by Maddie's Fund, OcuTrap, and Strategies to Reunite Lost Cats with Families Certification Workshop and Increasing Your Impact With Targeted TNR Certification Workshop. The kittens are coming. We know it every spring, but this year, Shelter Animals Count has the data to prove exactly how big the wave will be — and which organizations will feel it hardest. If your shelter or rescue isn't already ramping up fosters, supplies, and community outreach, this episode is your signal to start today. Tori Fugate is the Director of Communications for Shelter Animals Count — now a program of the ASPCA — and she has spent more than a decade at the intersection of animal welfare and strategic communications. Before joining SAC, she was Chief Communications Officer at KC Pet Project, where she helped transform one of the country's most visible municipal shelters into a national model for innovative, lifesaving work. Tori joins host Stacy LeBaron to unpack the latest findings from SAC's 2025 Annual Data Report — including the striking reality that 59% of all cats entering shelters in 2025 were kittens under five months of age. They dig into how to use zip-code-level intake data to target foster recruitment and community outreach before the floodgates open, and why creative thinking — think paper collars with QR codes to crowdfund spay/neuter costs — may be just as important as resources and policy. They also tackle one of the industry's most alarming trends: only 23% of cats entering shelters in 2025 arrived already spayed or neutered, nearly 3% below pre-pandemic levels. Tori explains how SAC's groundbreaking Altered Status at Intake Report is helping organizations understand where access-to-care gaps are widest — and what shelter communicators can do right now to start closing them. Press Play Now For: Why cats and kittens are just as marketable as dogs — and why the most ridiculous cat names often drive the most adoptionsThe significance of 59% of all 2025 cat shelter intake being kittens under five months of ageHow government shelters and contract shelters are seeing disproportionately higher intake of kittens under eight weeksWhy only 23% of cats entering shelters in 2025 were already spayed or neutered — and what that means for resource allocationSAC's Altered Status at Intake Report: five years of data showing a nearly 3% decline from 2019 pre-pandemic levelsCreative approaches to community spay/neuter funding, including paper collar QR codes to crowdfund costsHow shelters can use zip-code-level intake data to target outreach, neighborhood meetings, and foster recruitmentPractical kitten season communication strategies: media outreach, foster spotlights, and targeted Amazon wishlistsThe importance of flexible, dynamic thinking when managing kitten surges — and how to support community members who can't bring kittens in right awaySAC's publicly available dashboards including the National Animal Welfare Statistics Dashboard (10 years of data!) and state-level breakdowns Resources & Links Shelter Animals CountSAC 2025 Annual Data ReportSAC Data ReportsSAC Altered Status at Intake ReportKC Pet ProjectPetHelpFinder.orgPets.FindHelp.comUnited Spay AllianceUnited Spay Alliance Spay/Neuter LocatorCommunity Cats Central
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    33 mins