Frustrated residents in two Brevard County beachside communities plan to tell city and state wildlife experts Thursday that coyotes need to go.

"They need to be trapped and my opinion is they need to be euthanized," said Scott Fee of Indian Harbour Beach.

It has been more than a month now since Fee captured a coyote chasing after his cat on surveillance video, outside his home, near Gleason Park in Indian Harbour Beach. His cat was never seen again.

Coyote sightings have only increased.

"There are plenty of people that are uncomfortable with even letting their dog out in the backyard which we should certainly be able to in a city without fear of something happening," said Fee.

Cages, watermelon, raw chicken, even drones were used to find and trap the coyotes last month. But Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission officers told Indian Harbour Beach city leaders the coyotes weren't causing a threat to public safety, so they weren't allowed to trap and relocate the animals.

The Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission is hosting a meeting with residents from Indian Harbour Beach and Satellite Beach to tell them how to live with coyotes.

"Lock up your garbage cans, take in your pet food, if you have cats or dogs don't leave them out roaming at night," said FWC Officer Lenny Salberg.

Only when a coyote is a threat can it be declared a nuisance and captured to be killed or relocated.

Fee says he thinks the coyotes roaming his neighborhood are already a nuisance. He wants to see them put down.

"Relocating a coyote to another area is simply going to move the problem to another area, to go through the same thing we are," said Fee.

The FWC meeting takes place at 6:30 pm is open to anyone in the public.  It will be held at the Gleason Park Community Center.