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Ep 659: Bridging the Gap in Access to Care with Claire Schuch, Associate Director of Research for University of Tennessee, Knoxville – Center for Pet Family Well-Being

April 7, 2026

Ep 661: From Stray Streets to Smart Shelters: Transforming Cat Welfare in Greece with Julie Kelley, Founder of Let’s Be S.M.A.R.T.

April 21, 2026

April 14, 2026

Ep 660: From Skeptics to Advocates: Launching TNR in an Underserved Rural Community with TyAnn Sumpter, Manager of Shelter Support at Charleston Animal Society

“Community cats — it’s really about the community. It brings the community together.”

This episode is sponsored-in-part by Maddie’s Fund, OcuTrap, and the Feline Behavior Summit 2026.

What does it take to build a community cat program from scratch in a rural, under-resourced area where nearly everyone — officers, residents, and administrators alike — is convinced it won’t work? In this episode of the Community Cats Podcast, host Stacy LeBaron sits down with TyAnn Sumpter, Manager of Shelter Support at Charleston Animal Society, to walk through one of the most compelling TNR success stories in recent memory. TyAnn came to animal welfare from the business world, and it was that entrepreneurial mindset that helped her see past the resistance and build something lasting in Florence County, South Carolina.

TyAnn shares how she designed and launched the region’s first TNR initiative using existing call log data, enthusiastic volunteers, and animal control officers who already knew which neighborhoods needed help. What started as a one-year, grant-funded pilot ended up spaying and neutering 1,700 cats in year one alone. By year two, the shelter that had previously taken in roughly a thousand cats annually had dropped its intake to just 73.

The ripple effects are just as remarkable. Neighboring Darlington County started calling to ask why they didn’t have a program, and TyAnn helped them get set up. Florence County eventually hired its own dedicated community cat coordinator, purchased its own transport van, and secured permanent budget funding — all things that would have seemed unimaginable when TyAnn first walked through that shelter door. She also makes a compelling case for using complaint call reductions and cost savings to win over skeptical municipal administrators.

Press Play Now For:

  • How TyAnn built Florence County’s first TNR program with no roadmap and no buy-in
  • Why mining call log data was the key to finding the community’s hidden cat advocates
  • The dramatic shelter intake drop — from 1,000 cats per year to just 73
  • How the program expanded into neighboring counties and became permanently self-funded
  • The role animal control officers played in identifying colonies and building community trust
  • Making the financial case to county administrators using complaint call metrics
  • How Charleston Animal Society handles high-volume TNR surgeries two hours away
  • Why a nonjudgmental, community-first approach is the most powerful tool in TNR
  • The unexpected expansions: pet pantries, low-cost owned-cat spay/neuter, and more

Resources & Links

Episode Update!

Since the recording of this episode, The Program for Pet Health Equity (PPHE) is now the Center for Pet Family Well-Being (CPFW). The links listed above and mentioned in the episode should forward you to the new, relevant information, but you can check out this article for all the details about the change.

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