A feline friend will do their business on your subject of choice for $10.
A feline friend will do their business on your subject of choice for $10.
David Wright

Valentine’s Day fundraiser sends exes straight to the litter box

For $10, the Rhode Island Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals’ cats will quite literally do their business on a pink paper heart bearing your chosen name

Share
A feline friend will do their business on your subject of choice for $10.
A feline friend will do their business on your subject of choice for $10.
David Wright
Valentine’s Day fundraiser sends exes straight to the litter box
Copy

For the jilted and the jaded, Valentine’s Day can be crappy. The Rhode Island SPCA appreciates that.

The animal welfare organization designed an unusual fundraiser around the idea. For a $10 donation, you can give them the name of someone or something on your “S” list. (In this case, the “S” doesn’t stand for “special.”)

“It’s called Love Stinks,” said Stephanie Van Patten, the RISPCA’s director of community engagement.

“We use our cats to provide “retripution” for any ex-lover or thing you don’t like and want to get back at,” she explained.

Yep. That’s “retripution” spelled with a “P-U” – courtesy of the shelter cats.

At a conference table in the organization’s headquarters in Warwick, social media manager Chloe Pothier writes each name on a pink paper heart.

“We write the last initial and the first name,” she said. “But it’s not just names. It’s also cancer, political stuff, your boss, traffic, stuff like that.”

It’s where those paper hearts end up that’s the true stroke of genius.

Pothier carries them into the room where the shelter cats stay. She plants the paper hearts in the litter box in neat little rows, like a miniature desert garden of names.

The kitty cats take care of the rest.

The RISPCA posts before and after pictures on Facebook and Instagram for proof of performance.

“Sometimes Valentine’s Day is not always the happiest time of year for some people,” Pothier said. “So hopefully this brings them some joy.”

As expert matchmakers, connecting soulmates and mending broken hearts, the RISPCA knows a thing or two about love.

They also know how fragile love is. It can be gone in a heartbeat, leaving longtime loyal companions suddenly in need of a new home.

This is the third year RISPCA has tried the anti-Valentine fundraiser approach.

The first year they had contributions from all 50 states plus a number of foreign countries, and raised more than $10,000. So far this year, they’ve had submissions from 27 states plus DC and Portugal.

Last year, they tried to change it up with a dog-themed approach. For a small donation you could sponsor a chew toy with your frenemy’s name on it. But it wasn’t as popular as Love Stinks, so this year they are back to the cats.

Other rescue organizations have apparently taken the idea to the extreme, allowing contributors to commemorate their hurt feelings in more lasting ways.

“Some places will spay or neuter a cat for your Ex,” Van Patten said.

Ouch!

Van Patten shrugged. “It’s all for a good cause,” she said.

A fresh batch of despised names are ready for cats to do their worst.
A fresh batch of despised names are ready for cats to do their worst.
David Wright/Ocean State Media

When the RISPCA first tried out this fundraising idea in 2024, it was an election year. So a lot of political names ended up in the box.

“We had bipartisan contributions,” Van Patten said.

This year, not so much. The political hearts that end up in the box are very one-sided this year.

But don’t expect to see those names on the RISPCA’s Facebook page.

“We don’t post those,” said Van Patten. “We want to protect our nonprofit status.”

They don’t want a little light-hearted “retripution” to provoke retribution.

Rhode Island’s senators say the Trump Justice Department bypassed a bipartisan process in appointing Charles ‘Chas’ Calenda, calling him unqualified for the top federal prosecutor role
‘I don’t have an additional $900 lying around in my family budget to pay for this’
Research from Salve Regina University shows many libraries across southern New England are dealing with employee burnout and high rates of turnover as they try to adapt to modern-day patron needs
For this year’s final episode of the Weekend 401, we have some New Year’s tips — from Deer Tick at the Uptown Theater, to the last Waterfire of the year, to the 30th annual ‘Moby-Dick’ marathon at the Whaling Museum. Plus: kick off the new year with an ice-cold splash at First Beach
The downtown landmark lit up again this holiday season, as its new owner hopes to reopen the building as art studios in early 2027
Seneca Falls, New York, may not have the only claims on the film