Saturday, December 27, 2025
ADVT 
National

Five Bears Feasting On Garbage In Penticton Neighbourhood Are Euthanized

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 28 Oct, 2019 05:11 PM

    PENTICTON, B.C. - Conservation officers euthanized five bears travelling together in Penticton, B.C., on Thursday.

    Area resident Heidi McHale said the bears had been prowling her neighbourhood for several days and were feasting on garbage that residents had left outside their homes.

    "There is no need to keep it outside. I am so upset, because this was so preventable. It didn't have to happen," she said.

    Conservation officer Sgt. James Zucchelli said they've been trying to get the community to clean up and not leave garbage out.

    He said the bears took up residence in the greenbelt next to the local elementary school and created an unsafe situation for the general public and students.

    "Basically, we were put into a position where public safety had to outweigh the bears."

    Zucchelli said his office received complaints for several days about the increasingly brazen bears going on people's decks, destroying a hot-tub cover and charging a 20-year-old man on Wednesday evening.

    The five-bear group was "highly unusual," he added, because it was made up of three adult males and two younger females, that weren't offspring of the males.

    Zucchelli said it was like a group of adults and teenagers operating together.

    "The only thing we can surmise is that there were so many attractants around there that they were just able to be around each other and go door-to-door and get what they wanted."

    The bears, which were trying to build fat stores before winter hibernation, weren't suitable candidates for relocation because they had become so habituated to food and humans, he said.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    B.C. Files Second Legal Challenge Against Alberta Over Turn-Off-Taps Law

    VANCOUVER — The British Columbia government has filed a second lawsuit against Alberta over its turn-off-the-taps legislation.

    B.C. Files Second Legal Challenge Against Alberta Over Turn-Off-Taps Law

    Budget Watchdog Says Cost To Match One Of Trump's Business Tax Cuts Is $37B

    Budget Watchdog Says Cost To Match One Of Trump's Business Tax Cuts Is $37B
    Parliament's spending watchdog is putting new numbers to the cost of matching recent U.S. business-tax changes, pegging the price to the federal treasury at more than double government estimates.

    Budget Watchdog Says Cost To Match One Of Trump's Business Tax Cuts Is $37B

    Trial Hears Man Shot At Least Nine Times By Manitoba RCMP Officer

    Trial Hears Man Shot At Least Nine Times By Manitoba RCMP Officer
    THOMPSON, Man. — The manslaughter trial of an RCMP officer in northern Manitoba heard a man was shot at least nine times by the constable.    

    Trial Hears Man Shot At Least Nine Times By Manitoba RCMP Officer

    Manitoba Premier Brian Pallister Moves Up Election Date To Sept. 10

    WINNIPEG — Manitoba Premier Brian Pallister says he is moving up the next provincial election by more than a year.    

    Manitoba Premier Brian Pallister Moves Up Election Date To Sept. 10

    Trudeau Promises To Legislate Implementation Of UNDRIP If Ee-Elected

    Trudeau Promises To Legislate Implementation Of UNDRIP If Ee-Elected
    Prime Minister Justin Trudeau is promising that a re-elected Liberal government will introduce legislation to ensure federal laws are harmonized with the United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples.

    Trudeau Promises To Legislate Implementation Of UNDRIP If Ee-Elected

    Young Newfoundland Man Who Stole Human Skull And Kept It As 'Curiosity' Sentenced To Jail

    A young Newfoundland man who robbed a human skull from a cemetery and kept it in his possession for more than a year as a "curiosity item" has been sentenced to four months in jail.

    Young Newfoundland Man Who Stole Human Skull And Kept It As 'Curiosity' Sentenced To Jail