






ATTENTION LANDLORDS!
Prevent Urine Property Damage!
Allowing pets as renters is a great money maker for landlords! Attracting long term, quality renters with a demonstrated ability to care for valuables, & charging a higher security deposit, or extra pet fees, are easy ways to help the units stay occupied & the business to prosper!
When landlords do allow cats as tenants though, many require that they be “declawed” thinking this will prevent damage to their property. What they may not know is that declawing is a serious, painful surgery whose effects can actually cause damage to the property. "DECLAWING” involves 10 separate, painful amputations of a cat’s knucklebone, tendons, ligaments, & nerves. It is actually “de-toeing” or “de-knuckling” a cat which is illegal in many countries because it permanently disfigures a healthy paw. This is a medically unnecessary surgery that carries risks & physical, psychological, & behavioral consequences. Studies prove that declawed cats use their teeth more (they become "mouthy" since their main means of claw defense is now gone) and their litterbox less due to a variety of reasons including chronic or intermittent paw pain, pain association with the litterbox, and arthritis. It may feel much better to a declawed cat to urinate on a smooth surface than to dig their declawed paws into rough litter. The floors, carpet, drywall, baseboards, and woodwork may be the new place where the cat urinates, creating lingering urine smell, penetrating urine soaking, and extensive and expensive property damage.

"In my own three-year experience, 95% of calls about declawed cats related to litter box problems, while only 46% of clawed cats had such problems—and most of those were older cats with physical ailments. Of my calls, only declawed cats have cost their owners security deposits, leather sofas and floorboards. ...Two-thirds of my calls are about litter box problems. In 90% of those cases, the cat is declawed, sick or old. In 7 years, only 3 people have called about a “scratching-the-sofa problem” - yet countless of “healthy” declawed cats have peed on sofas." Annie Bruce, cat consultant & author of Instead of requiring cat declawing, landlords can ask renters for a resume or bio of their cats depicting how they address cat scratching. Require that each cat tenant have tall sisal scratching posts and several cardboard scratch pads before moving in. The vast majority of cats can easily be redirected to do their healthy scratching on cardboard scratch pads and sisal posts, and there is also Soft Paws (http://www.softpaws.com) & Sticky Paws (http://www.stickypaws.com)))) for more stubborn, but still trainable, cats. “ This is a cruel and disfiguring procedure which often results in more severe behavior problems. Scratching is better solved with behavior modification and management techniques on the part of the cat owner.” http://www.massanimalcoalition.org/landlords.html#_DO’S_AND_DON’Ts HUMANE ALTERNATIVES: NAIL TRIMMING: regular nail trims keep claws blunt & harmless and unable to snag or tear furniture, carpet or woodwork. SCRATCH POSTS: sturdy, tall, coarse sisal scratch posts really work! http://www.purrfectpost.com CARDBOARD SCRATCH PADS: corrugated cardboard naturally attracts cats for scratching and can be purchased at most grocery stores these days. STICKYPAWS: or double-sided tape can be put over woodwork to prevent damage. http://www.stickypaws.com (*If you would like this information in a Word Document, check HERE!)



FROM A LANDLORD...
“I have been a landlord for over 30 years and have rented to many people with cats during this time. I have never had to withhold any security deposits from cat damage, nor do I ask for an additional deposit when cats are part of the family that is renting from us….
I think that other landlords might be gratified to learn of an extremely high correlation (that I have found) for when a prospective tenant says that they would never do something like that to a cat (declaw)...will turn out to be a great tenant who will not want to disturb other tenants and care about taking care of the landlord's property…
I do encourage companion people to put a lot of scratching posts all over when the apartment has wall to wall carpeting, and have never had a problem with cats ruining any carpets.”
T. Line Development
