Not everything we cover involves government waste or transit meltdowns. Sometimes the Bay Area just serves up a straightforward feel-good story — and this is one of them.
A 12-week-old kitten found abandoned in West San Jose three weeks ago is now fully healed and looking for a permanent home. The little guy was in rough shape when a local family took him in — a leg injury, an eye infection, and a respiratory infection all at once. Two vet visits, a deworming, and a defleaing later, he's apparently ready to take on the world.
The foster family reports he gets along great with their two cats and has shown remarkable patience with their toddler, who — as toddlers do — expresses affection primarily through aggressive squeezing. So if you've got kids or other cats, this one's built for chaos.
Word is already spreading. One Bay Area mom commented that she's actively searching for a kitten this age after her family's 16-year-old cat recently passed. "My 3-year-old grew up with her. She is asking for a sibling and I am a single mom, so I need a kitty ASAP," she wrote.
Here's what we appreciate about stories like this: no government program, no taxpayer dollars, no bureaucratic approval process. Just a family that saw a problem, spent their own time and money fixing it, and is now trying to find the best outcome for a tiny animal that got dealt a bad hand. That's community working the way it's supposed to — voluntarily, efficiently, and without a permit.
If you're in the South Bay or broader Bay Area and interested in adopting, reach out to local San Jose community boards where the foster family is fielding inquiries. Given the demand, this little survivor probably won't be available for long.
Sometimes the best thing government can do is absolutely nothing — and let good people be good people.