What’s Hot … Mandatory Sterilization for Cats Proceeds to Hawaii Senate, while the Sterilization Requirements for Imported Dogs and Cats Bill Fails to Cross Over
Kelly Crouch, CFA Legislative Information Liaison
The mandatory cat sterilization requirement remains attached to the Hawaiian Spay and Neuter Special Fund Bill, HB 1736 HD2. After two amendments, the show cat exception was removed, only to be replaced by a mandate for intact cats over the age of five months to be covered by a $100 intact cat declaration filed with the applicable county animal control authority. The House passed the bill, and the Senate is now considering it. The bill was referred to the Agriculture and Environment, Energy and Intergovernmental Affairs, and Ways and Means Committees.
The Special Fund is a laudable method to provide counties with spaying and neutering funds to address the availability of affordable sterilization services to disadvantaged communities. Hawaii has several endangered species, and community cats and dogs are considered one of the dangers to ground-nesting birds, sea turtles, and Hawaiian Monk Seals (due to exposure to toxoplasmosis). Invasive species such as mongooses, rats, and mosquitoes also pose threats to native birds. The legislature should narrowly tailor any legislation to its purpose and address all threats to endangered species, including human activity. Piecemeal efforts will not save those endangered animals.
Yet, the bill unnecessarily ties punitive fees to owning intact cats. Not only are 80–90% of owned cats sterilized without such legislation, but generally, only two groups of people would own intact cats. This special fund helps low-income pet owners who cannot afford sterilization procedures. Punitive fees of $500 – $1,000 per cat do not help when people cannot afford the procedures in the first place. As intact cats exhibit unpleasant hormonal behaviors, making services available to this group will help reduce the number of unsterilized cats in these communities. Small in-home preservation breeders are the other people keeping intact cats. Breeders do not want their cats roaming the islands, mating with random-bred cats, and bringing home diseases that could destroy their breeding programs. Pedigreed cats make up only 3–5% of the cat population; they do not contribute to Hawaii’s community cat issues. Yet, this bill penalizes preservation breeders for a problem they do not cause. It also raises the question of whether local clubs could continue to produce cat shows, as the bill does not provide any exceptions for cats temporarily in the state.
In addition to penalizing pet owners, this bill puts the burden of enforcement on counties. Local governments are better positioned to assess their animal control needs than a one-size-fits-all plan that does more harm than good.
The Agriculture and Environment and Energy and Intergovernmental Affairs Committees have scheduled a hearing for House Bill 1736 HD2 on March 18, 2026, at 3:10 p.m. in Conference Room 224. Fanciers should oppose this bill as long as it contains the mandatory spay/neuter mandate. Testimony can be submitted online here.
Fortunately for cat and dog fanciers, Senate Bill 3012 failed to make the crossover deadline and is not expected to progress this legislative session. That bill mandated the sterilization of imported cats and dogs.
UPDATE 3/28/2026: After the Senate Agriculture and Environment Committee deferred HB 1736 HD2, proponents amended SB 1023 carried over from 2025. SB 1023 was replaced in its entirety by the language in HB 1736 HD2 and is now SB 1023 HD2. It has been referred to the House Finance Committee.
