
A handful of residents spoke at Wednesday’s Mineola Board of Trustees meeting about feral cat roaming village streets, but officials said they were barking up the wrong tree and should talk to the Town of North Hempstead instead.
The village does not have an animal control department, it’s one of the services Mineola residents rely on the Town of North Hempstead to manage, Deputy Mayor Paul Pereira said.
Robert Sckalor, a village resident who lives on Simonson Road and addressed the board regarding the feral cats in the fall. Since then, two new litters of cats have reproduced on his block alone, he said.
More cats have also appeared on Marcellus Road by the Mineola Memorial Library, Sckalor said.
“That is the section of Mineola with wonderful concerts, all these great things,” Sckalor said. “Who wants to see all these cats, who wants to walk into a concert and step on cat feces as they go see ‘Aladdin’ tomorrow night?”
Sckalor said he’s reached out to the town regarding their program, which catches, spays and re-releases cats.
He was told there is a 12-18 month waiting list for the program, he said.
Sckalor asked the village board if it would be possible for Mineola to create a program to “solve our own problems.”

(Photo courtesy of Michelle Nunziata)
In many ways, the village is self-sufficient and does not rely on town services, Pereira said.
Unlike unincorporated areas, such as Carle Place, Roslyn Heights and Albertson, Mineola residents don’t use the town’s sanitation or building departments, Pereira said.
“The town provides you with very little, the one thing they do provide you with is this service, so you have every right to demand the one or two services that you pay taxes to them to provide you with … could be better,” Pereira said. “Maybe they don’t know because they’re too busy listening to North Shore communities where it’s not a problem.”
Pereira suggested residents call town officials and speak out at Town Board meetings.
“What you just said needs to be said at a town meeting … and you need to put them on the spot because at the end of the day the solution isn’t us,” Pereira said.
The next Town Board meeting will be held on Aug. 14 at Town Hall in Manhasset.
Town Councilman Angelo Ferrara, whose district includes the village, said he did not wish to comment but his office is aware of the problem and is working on it.
Mayor Scott Strauss said he would also put in a call to Ferrara and North Hempstead Town Supervisor Judi Bosworth.
Bosworth was not immediately available for comment on Friday morning.
Michelle Nunziata, a resident who lives on Marcellus road, said she’s seen three or four new litters of kittens this summer.
Nunziata said she’s found sick cats, one with crust and green pus surrounding its eye. She also found a dead can in her window well; her mother and her neighbor’s dog both got ringworm, she said.
There are young children on the block who can’t play outside because of the cat feces, she added.
Ricardo Gonales, a resident who lives on Marcellus Road, said there are about 18 cats that hang around his neighbor’s property. He suspects his neighbor is feeding them, he said.
The cats regularly make their way onto his property, leaving his car with scratches and his lawn laden with feces, he said.
Nunziata said she’s also aware of a resident who regularly leaves plates of food out for cats.

(Photo courtesy of Michelle Nunziata)
Not feeding cats is the main way residents can go about mending the problem, village officials said.
It also breaks with Nassau County code which states that no animal can be fed outside in a way that causes food to be available to rodents, Strauss said.
“If you feel your neighbor might be violating this code and feeding cats, please consider having a friendly chat about this,” Strauss said. “… They might not even realize they’re doing it and that it’s a problem.”
If the problem continues, residents can call the Nassau County Board of Health and they will follow up with the residents, Strauss said.
Trap-neuter-release (TNR) will not reduce the feral cat population and will not solve your problems. TNR has not reduced the feral cat population of any municipality in the country. And TNR cats continue to poop and pee in yards and gardens. TNR cats continue to damage cars and other property. TNR cats carry and spread toxoplasmosis, and they can also have rabies.
Report the people who are illegally feeding cats outdoors. Secure other food sources such as garbage so that the cats cannot get into it. I strongly encourage residents who are tired of cats all over the place to get a live-trap and trap them on your property. Use roast chicken scraps or sardines canned in oil for bait. Take trapped cats to a shelter that does not practice TNR or participate in “barn cat” programs. There are almost certainly more cats around than you think there are, but continued and persistent trapping and removal will eventually reduce the number. TNR simply ensures there will always be cats around.
It seems some residents are more concerned about stepping on “cat feces” Instead of concerning themselves with how much these poor guys suffer outside. Ultimately humans are responsible for this problem. Stepping on feces should not be the main concern, compassion for life should be.