Comabbio's Sardinian mayor challenges the righteous: "This is how I protect animals."
Ogliastra native Mariolino Deplano signs the ordinance banning cat feeding: "I'm doing it to save them."Per restare aggiornato entra nel nostro canale Whatsapp
Feeding stray cats is prohibited. Fines up to €500. Just reading these lines is enough to spark outrage on social media and reverberate in newsrooms across Italy. But behind the ordinance signed on October 13, 2025, by the mayor of Comabbio, Mariolino Deplano, lies no crusade against animals. Quite the opposite. It's an administrative decision aimed at protecting them, regulating a situation that has become unmanageable.
Mariolino Deplano, 69, who has been mayor of this residential town of 1,200 inhabitants in the province of Varese for a year, has ended up in the media crosshairs.
Sardinian by origin—born in Tertenia, father of Gairo and mother of Baunei—Deplano left the island at the age of eight, but Sardinia, he says in limba, "is in my heart and in my blood." Before settling in Comabbio twelve years ago, far "from the chaos of the city," he bluntly described himself as "a vagabond."
Today, he's the subject of a controversy that's gone beyond Lombardy's borders. A municipal ordinance prohibits residents from feeding cats that live between Via Lucio Fontana, Via ai Prati, and the surrounding areas.
A decision that, on the surface, seems cruel. But in reality, it stems from a shared approach with the ATS Insubria veterinary service.
"They're accusing me of working against cats," Deplano says, "but it's exactly the opposite. This measure is to protect their health, prevent the spread of diseases, and keep the feline population under control. And I say this as an animal lover: I have six cats at home."
The crux of the matter lies precisely here. In the area affected by the ordinance, the municipality has officially established a cat colony, entrusting its responsibility to the mayor himself.
The colony was created to manage a group of cats that grew over time from animals initially owned by a private individual.
Today, feeding, veterinary care, and protection are organized according to precise and controlled procedures, in accordance with the ATS (the Italian National Health Service). Feeding randomly, without rules or controls, instead, encourages overpopulation, conflicts between animals, and health risks.
This is an aspect that many critics seem to ignore, limiting themselves to indignant comments on social media, often on the mayor's own Facebook profile, where he's even been called a "bandit." Yet, a simple reading of the ordinance is enough to understand that this isn't a punitive measure: so far, no fines have been issued.
The measure goes beyond a simple feeding ban. Property owners are required to adequately seal off abandoned buildings, cellars, attics, and unused structures to prevent uncontrolled cat shelters.
Private individuals are also responsible for cleaning and disinfecting their own waste and organic waste.
In short, the Sardinian mayor, who has unwittingly found himself in the spotlight, is pushing a clear line: less emotion, more responsibility—"even when it comes to cats."
