Thursday, December 18, 2025
ADVT 
National

B.C. Conservation Officer Service Says Policy Review Into Bear Cubs Rescue Coming

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 22 Apr, 2016 12:03 PM
    VANCOUVER — British Columbia's Conservation Officer Service says an internal policy review related to last year's high-profile case of an officer refusing to euthanize two orphaned bear cubs will soon be complete.
     
    The public-safety provider's deputy chief Chris Doyle says he doesn't believe anything was wrong with a policy that suspended Bryce Casavant and later transferred him for refusing an order that he kill a pair of cubs deemed habituated to humans.
     
    Doyle says the findings of their review will be coming out "not too far down the road."
     
    Casavant won the hearts of animal lovers last July when he opted not to shoot the cubs after their mother was destroyed for repeatedly raiding a home near Port Hardy on northern Vancouver Island.
     
    Julie Mackey is a wildlife manager at the rehabilitation facility where the cubs are living and says they are doing well and haven't shown any signs of poor behaviour since their arrival last summer.
     
    Mackey says the cubs are scheduled for release later this year and that the real test of their success will be how they perform in the wild.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Liberals Targeted Four BC Ridings With Party Funds To Help Campaigns: Analysis

    Liberals Targeted Four BC Ridings With Party Funds To Help Campaigns: Analysis
    OTTAWA — The Liberals pumped almost $700,000 into four B.C. ridings in the last election, dethroning two Conservative incumbents and one New Democrat, and losing to the NDP in the hotly contested riding of Vancouver East, election spending data show.

    Liberals Targeted Four BC Ridings With Party Funds To Help Campaigns: Analysis

    B.C. First Nations Dispute Over North Coast LNG Project Reaches Ottawa

    VANCOUVER — First Nations leaders from British Columbia were scheduled to travel to Ottawa this week to make their case against a proposed liquefied natural gas project near Prince Rupert.

    B.C. First Nations Dispute Over North Coast LNG Project Reaches Ottawa

    4-Year-Old Aurora, Ont., Girl In Hospital After Alleged Abduction, Car Crash

    4-Year-Old Aurora, Ont., Girl In Hospital After Alleged Abduction, Car Crash
    York Regional police allege Julia Dela-Cruz was abducted by her father after he forced his way into his ex-wife's house at about 4:20 a.m.

    4-Year-Old Aurora, Ont., Girl In Hospital After Alleged Abduction, Car Crash

    Man Pleads Gilty To Manslaughter In Stabbing Outside Abbotsford Gas Station

    Man Pleads Gilty To Manslaughter In Stabbing Outside Abbotsford Gas Station
    The Integrated Homicide Investigation Team says 30-year-old Thavone Junior Carlson has been sentenced to five years in prison and three years of probation.

    Man Pleads Gilty To Manslaughter In Stabbing Outside Abbotsford Gas Station

    Hit-And-Run Collision On Vancouver's West Side Leaves Skateboarder Dead

    Hit-And-Run Collision On Vancouver's West Side Leaves Skateboarder Dead
    Two men were skateboarding on the west side of the city (near Heather Street and West 54th Avenue) when one was struck by a car.

    Hit-And-Run Collision On Vancouver's West Side Leaves Skateboarder Dead

    B.C. Rally Held Against Changes To Rules Named For Killed Gas Station Attendant

    B.C. Rally Held Against Changes To Rules Named For Killed Gas Station Attendant
    Doug De Patie says WorkSafe B.C. opened the door to unsafe conditions for workers in 2012 when it amended a set of rules known as Grant's Law, named after his son Grant De Patie.

    B.C. Rally Held Against Changes To Rules Named For Killed Gas Station Attendant