Tabby's Place



Tabby's Place is a cat sanctuary situated in Ringoes, New Jersey, United States. Opened in 2003, it can house approximately 130 cats, which come primarily from high-volume public animal shelters where they have been scheduled to be killed.

History
Opened in 2003, the inception of Tabby's Place began with a stray brown tabby cat. Jonathan Rosenberg, then Chief Technology Officer at CNET, and his wife Sharon adopted this cat and named him "Tabby". The Rosenbergs lost Tabby fifteen years later to untreatable squamous cell carcinoma. In honor of Tabby, Jonathan resigned from his job, cashed in his company stock options and invested more than US$2 million to create a new 501(c)(3) non-profit corporation called Tabby's Place. The sanctuary was established "to provide refuge to cats in hopeless situations." The sanctuary's 500th intake was documented in 2007 in the Westchester Times Tribune.

In 2008, Tabby's Place garnered the attention of national and local media thanks to a paraplegic resident, Tashi. Tashi was featured on several channels, including Cat Channel upon Tashi's rescue, Best Friends Animal Society, ZooToo in 2008, the Courier News in 2009, the CBS Evening News with Katie Couric in 2009, and WWOR-TV.

In June 2010, a USA Today article described a United States Marine stationed in Okinawa, Japan, who had been caring for three stray cats when his local animal shelter was being shut down. The cats were scheduled to be euthanized, but the Marine requested help from the Okinawan American Animal Rescue Society, which arranged for the cats' journey from Okinawa to Tabby's Place. The transfer, which occurred in April 2010, was Tabby's Place's first international rescue. Since then, Tabby's Place has worked with several international rescues from a variety of countries such as Lebanon and Oman and US territory Puerto Rico.

Located in the small New Jersey town of Ringoes, Tabby's Place houses approximately 130 cats from local Animal control, the public, and public shelters where they have been scheduled to be killed as of 2010. As of late 2010, over 750 Tabby's Place cats had been adopted, approximately 150 had lived out the remainder of their lives at the sanctuary, and 100 awaited adoption by qualifying families. Founder Jonathan Rosenberg continues to serve as an unsalaried full-time executive director, assisted by a growing staff of sanctuary associates, a vet team, and other managers.

In 2011, Tabby's Place: A Cat Sanctuary was the host of a Trap-Neuter-Return Boot Camp with the Utah-based Best Friends Animal Society. Tabby's Place has previously offered several "kitty cabs" to low cost spay and neuter clinics, but currently relies on local organization Hunterdon TNR for most trap-neuter-return services.

In 2014, funds raised by a tour of the cat Lil Bub were in part donated to Tabby's Place.

In June 2015, Tabby's Place held a Kitten Shower open to visitors, with a reading and book-signing by author Gwen Cooper, known for writing Homer's Odyssey about a blind cat. Around 20 kittens were available for adoption at the event. At the time, there were over 100 cats at the sanctuary. While the Kitten Shower was temporarily discontinued to due to the Covid outbreak, Tabby's Place now hosts annual virtual kitten showers in the spring to showcase their adoptable kittens and promote animal adoption.

In November 2016, the sanctuary or a time lowered the adoption cost of senior cats from all cats over ten years of age from $135 to $50. At the time, a third of Tabby's Place's 120 cats were over the age of ten. Tabby's Place occasionally offers adoption rate deals for holidays or special events.

Individuals contributed 97% of Tabby's Place's income in 2016.

As of Summer 2023, Tabby's Place is nearing its 4000th resident rescued.

Facility and services


Tabby's Place acts as an adoption center, and hospital and hospice for cats. Tabby's Place also provides annual open houses where pet owners can obtain microchip implants for their pets and learn from exhibitions and mini-classes in animal behavior.

Tabby's Place houses around 130 cats in a single building, and in 2010 had plans the addition of two more buildings to increase care for a total of 500 residents. The physical design of the Tabby's Place building and attention to detail has received considerable media coverage. The New Jersey Monthly described the sanctuary as "palatial." The sanctuary is cage free and constructed of materials that allow for easy and frequent cleaning. The building includes specialized suites for cats with specific medical needs, outdoor enclosures with access to sunlight, communal living areas with areas to exercise, and a medical facility in house. Focusing on serving cats scheduled for euthanasia at public shelters and rarely taking cats in from members of the public, Tabby's Place abides by a strict "no-kill" policy. Tabby's Place does not restrict the admission of cats on the basis of age or medical conditions, or being generally considered "unadoptable" by the standards of most public animal shelters. Tabby's Place houses many "special needs" cats, adopting a philosophy that even cats with serious health conditions such as diabetes, Feline immunodeficiency virus (FIV), neurological disabilities, cancer, blindness and paraplegia should be able to live with dignity, to have a loving home, and to be adopted. Families who are unable to adopt are offered the option of sponsoring or "virtually" adopting a cat.

In August 2023, Tabby's Place will be celebrating the Grand Opening of their first ever expansion, Quinn's Corner. Quinn's Corner is a state-of-the-art facility that provides space for up to 50 more cats, especially those diagnosed with Feline Leukemia (FeLV+). Many shelters are not equipped to handle FeLV+, leading to high rates of euthanasia for cats who test positive. In their continuing mission to save the last chance cats of the world, Tabby's Place is now opening its doors to cats with feline leukemia.

Media coverage
Tabby's Place cats and personnel are frequently seen in YouTube video shorts and the facility and its residents have been included in programming on Animal Planet's series Cats 101.

As of 2016, NewJersey.com had on ongoing "Cat of the Week at Tabby's Place" column ongoing in the community bulletin of the paper.

Recognition
The Rosenbergs' work has been recognized by the New Jersey Veterinary Medical Association, which awarded Jonathan the 2005 New Jersey Veterinary Foundation Award, and the Supreme Master Ching Hai International Association awarded Jonathan and Sharon the Shining World Hero Award in 2009.

Most recently, the "SuperCats" of Tabby's Place were collectively nominated by the sanctuary's volunteers and won the New Jersey Veterinary Medical Association's 2011 Animal Hall of Fame Award.