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After finding three stray kittens, Marilyn Tollin and her neighbour were desperate to find a solution to keep them from freezing amid the sometimes-harsh southern Alberta winters.<\/p>
\u201cPoor little things are going to be out in the cold. I said, well, I can try to contact some people,\u201d said Tollin.<\/p>
She reached out to a new organization that was planning to make some free outdoor structures for cats to sleep in during the coldest months.<\/p>
\u201cI could use one of these houses that they were talking about making and Sunday, they brought it out to me.\u201d<\/p>
The makeshift cat homes are built using foam coolers, straw, a wooden base and a plastic tote as the outer shell.<\/p>\t\t
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The Pet and Animal Advocacy and Care Team, or PAACT, is running the program off donated materials, though they have 17 currently in the works. Tollin, however, was the first to receive one.<\/p>\t\t\t\t\t
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The program is being dubbed \u201cthe warm whiskers project.\u201d<\/p>
For years, there has been concern over stray and abandoned pets in Lethbridge. As time goes on, more shelters, foster groups and advocates seem to become more overwhelmed.<\/p>\t
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