Kitties on the clock

Working Cat program gives hard-to-adopt felines jobs at Baltimore businesses

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BALTIMORE — Not long ago, Inky the cat was so angry and frightened that the only way his rescuers at the Baltimore Animal Rescue & Care Shelter Inc. (BARCS) could handle him was by trapping the four-year-old black cat with a net.

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Hey there, time traveller!
This article was published 17/10/2017 (3195 days ago), so information in it may no longer be current.

BALTIMORE — Not long ago, Inky the cat was so angry and frightened that the only way his rescuers at the Baltimore Animal Rescue & Care Shelter Inc. (BARCS) could handle him was by trapping the four-year-old black cat with a net.

Then Inky got a job doing pest control through the Working Cat program run by BARCS and, almost overnight, his outlook on life turned 180 degrees.

“The first day that BARCS brought Inky to us, he was hissing and really unhappy,” said Tom Foster, co-founder of Diamondback Brewing Company and Inky’s “employer.”

Karl Merton Ferron / Baltimore Sun
Diamondback Brewing Company co-founder and head brewer Tom Foster holds Inky, a cat the brewery received from the Working Cats program in Baltimore.
Karl Merton Ferron / Baltimore Sun Diamondback Brewing Company co-founder and head brewer Tom Foster holds Inky, a cat the brewery received from the Working Cats program in Baltimore.

“I thought, ‘Oh, I don’t know if this is going to work out.’ But, then he got here and it was like a switch went off. I don’t think he’s hissed once since that day. He’s gotten extremely friendly. He’ll let me pick him up, and he’ll jump on my lap when he wants to be petted.”

Inky is just one of the more than 100 success stories of a BARCS program that places difficult-to-adopt cats on farms, at warehouses, in nurseries, and in other commercial settings.

Starting in 2012, BARCS began a small version of what then was called its Barn Cat program. Organizers reasoned some cats weren’t meant to be pets but would be happy living a life with minimal human contact in which they nonetheless provided a useful service — rodent control. Meanwhile, humans in need of said service would provide the animals with food, shelter and medical care.

“Some cats can’t be placed in a home,” said Bailey Deacon, BARCS’ director of communications. “Some won’t use a litter box. Others are feral and haven’t been socialized. Some get over-stimulated and the only outlet they have for their energies is by hunting humans.”

Inky, for instance, came from a house where refuse was piled floor to ceiling, Deacon said. He’d lash out with his claws and teeth at any human who came near.

BARCS’ staff kept Inky under observation for a long time, waiting to see if his attitude would change. When it didn’t, they thought he might be a candidate for alternative placement.

As part of the program, BARCS donates the cat, spays or neuters the animal for free and surgically implants an identifying microchip. The shelter even delivers the feline to its new home.

The Barn Cat program operated on a relatively small scale for four years, Deacon said, placing about two dozen cats at area businesses. But in 2016, BARCS received a six-figure grant from the Petco Foundation that, among other things, allowed it to hire a full-time staff member to run the rebranded Working Cat program.

Since Amber Ketchum took the job at BARCS last December, Deacon said, she has placed more than 90 cats at area businesses and is well on her way to exceeding her 2017 goal of more than 100 placements.

“This is truly a life-saving program,” Deacon said.

“There was no other option for these cats. They would have sat and sat and sat and never been able to find a home. And the program has freed up cage space so we can place more indoor cats with families.”

Foster and his business partner, Colin Marshall, agreed to adopt Inky last winter because they wanted to give natural rodent control a try. Not only was their 7,000 square-foot Locust Point brewing facility filled with the barley used to brew the beer, it also was quite warm.

“It was mouse heaven,” Foster said.

They didn’t want to use chemical controls in a building where they were making a beverage, but found that traditional traps baited with peanut butter or cheese were ineffective.

So when BARCS got in touch to suggest the brewery adopt a cat, Foster and Marshall were willing to give Inky a try.

Within days of his arrival, Inky had dispatched half a dozen mice and the brewery’s rodent problem was a thing of the past. Perhaps because he finally was out of his cage and in a place where he was cared for and felt secure, Inky quickly became attached to the two men. And vice versa.

“We haven’t had a single mouse problem since Inky came,” Foster said. “His main job now is keeping us company and supervising our work.”

— Baltimore Sun

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