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NEONATAL KITTEN RESCUE HOBART LTD

Charity detailed scoring and metrics

Transparency
This charity is up-to-date on the ACNC, and does not have financial reports available. It has recent annual reports available on its website but not historic ones. It has a privacy policy available.
Finances
This charity has more assets than liabilities, and has asset coverage of 9 months of expenses. It has made 1 losses in the last five years.
Outcomes
Gold seal
This charity has submitted both recent and historic outcomes. It has described how it measures its outcomes.

About this organisation

Description of charity

We use evidence to guide our practice to improve the situation for cats, wildlife and our community. We stand for transparency in rescue and empower our community to help by informed voting, informed donating, informed adopting and supported volunteering. We aim to make Tasmania no kill while preserving our ecosystem. It can be done.

Summary of activities

Our winter work focusses on prevention. We desexed 65 pet cats for people doing it tough through our Eco Cats program. 38 were female. This prevents up to 400 kittens being born in the following year Our summer work is rescuing neonates. We rescued 52 neonates including a puppy with a cleft palate. Poisoning was suspected with 3 litters. We treated 1 kitten for FIP. 8 kittens died or were euthanaised in care. Molly puppy had successful surgery to repair her cleft palate and was adopted by her foster family.

Mission or vision of the charity

We rescue orphaned newborn and neonatal kittens who are unable to feed themselves and would not survive without intervention. We raise them to healthy weight for desex and adoption and find loving homes where they have the best chance of being cared for for the duration of their lives. We promote responsible cat ownership and cat containment. We identify where kittens came from and desex as many owned cats at the source as we can

Outcomes

Outcomes are self-reported by charities

Self-reported outcomes achieved

Kittens rescued

52

Total intake (2024)

Adopted kittens

44

The number of kittens adopted out (2024)

Ecocat desexes

65

We desex owned cats in targeted ways where rescued sick kittens come from (2024)

Outcomes measurement detail

Approach to measuring outcomes

We count kittens saved, adoped, euthanaised in care and died in care and report in our ACNC annual statement.

Programs and activities

Finances

What is this?

This graph shows how much revenue (money in) and expenses (money out) the charity has had each year over the last few years. Charities have many sources of revenue, such as donations, government grants, and services they sell to the public. Similarly, expenses are everything that allows the charity to run, from paying staff to rent.

What should I be looking for?

First off, this graph gives a general indication of how big the charity is - charities range in size from tiny (budgets of less than $100,000) to enormous (budgets more than $100 million). You're also looking for variability - if the charity's revenue and expenses are jumping up and down from year to year, make sure there's a good reason for it.

Unlike companies, charities and not-for-profits aren't on a mission to make money. However, if they spend more than they receive, eventually they will go into too much debt and run into trouble. As a very general rule, you want revenue to be slightly above expenses. If expenses is reliably above revenue, the charity is losing money. If revenue is much larger than expenses, it means the charity might not be using its resources effectively. It isn't always that simple, however, and there's a lot of reasons a charity might not follow this pattern. They might be saving up for a big purchase or campaign, or they might have made a big one-off payment. If you're worried, always look at the annual and financial reports to understand why the charity is making the decisions it is.

Transparency

Scoring detail

Details

Charity ACNC information last updated: 2025-05-26
Charity website information last updated: 2024-01-20
Charity information updated by charity: Yes, last updated 2025-01-10