Tuesday, December 23, 2025
ADVT 
National

Grizzly on island is safety risk, cannot be relocated, B.C. conservation officers say

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 16 Jun, 2025 01:18 PM
  • Grizzly on island is safety risk, cannot be relocated, B.C. conservation officers say

British Columbia's Conservation Officer Service says a grizzly that has stalked people, harassed livestock and damaged property on an island is not a candidate for relocation. 

The bear was reported chasing livestock on June 10 and 11 on Texada Island, and the service says they've had several complaints about the same grizzly which has already been moved twice from mainland locations. 

The service says it relocated the bear from Gibsons in the first week of September and from Sechelt at the end of the month, and on both occasions it returned to urban areas of the Sunshine Coast within weeks. 

More recently, it says the animal spent several days in Powell River breaking into boats at marinas trying to access bait. 

On May 22, the service says the grizzly stalked two people walking down a Powell River trail and they only escaped by getting in the water for 30 minutes while it circled back and forth on the shore, where it tore up one of their jackets before leaving. 

The service says it's a difficult decision to destroy an animal, but the high level of conflict history and the risk to safety means it is not in the public interest to try to relocate the bear a third time. 

It says conservation officers have not set traps and are not actively pursuing the bear, but if the bear's behavior continues to threaten safetyofficers "will respond to those situations."

Picture Courtesy: THE CANADIAN PRESS/Jonathan Hayward

MORE National ARTICLES

AI shouldn’t only benefit ultra-wealthy 'oligarchs,' Trudeau tells global AI summit

AI shouldn’t only benefit ultra-wealthy 'oligarchs,' Trudeau tells global AI summit
The world needs regulation to ensure the benefits of artificial intelligence aren't only enjoyed by extremely wealthy "oligarchs", Prime Minister Justin Trudeau said in a speech Monday at a global conference on AI. Trudeau said that the goal isn’t to stop progress but the technology needs guardrails, transparency and accountability.

AI shouldn’t only benefit ultra-wealthy 'oligarchs,' Trudeau tells global AI summit

Justice Minister Arif Virani won't run in next election

Justice Minister Arif Virani won't run in next election
Justice Minister Arif Virani says he won't be running in the coming federal election. Virani says in a social media post that the past decade in public office has taken a toll on his family life.

Justice Minister Arif Virani won't run in next election

RCMP's First Turbaned Officer Baltej Dhillon Among Three Newly Appointed Senators

RCMP's First Turbaned Officer Baltej Dhillon Among Three Newly Appointed Senators
The Prime Minister's Office says in a news release that the Governor General has appointed Baltej Dhillon for British Columbia, Martine Hébert for Quebec and Todd Lewis for Saskatchewan.

RCMP's First Turbaned Officer Baltej Dhillon Among Three Newly Appointed Senators

B.C. judge tosses drug evidence for 'numerous and flagrant' rights violations

B.C. judge tosses drug evidence for 'numerous and flagrant' rights violations
The court issued two rulings on evidence collected by Vernon Mounties in a case against Nabil Abdelkader, who police believed was in the drug trade after finding methamphetamine and cocaine in a jeep they searched in October 2020. 

B.C. judge tosses drug evidence for 'numerous and flagrant' rights violations

Canada invests $72 million in satellite constellation to monitor active wildfires

Canada invests $72 million in satellite constellation to monitor active wildfires
Canada is investing $72 million on a novel satellite constellation that will monitor active forest fires across the country. Federal Environment Minister Steven Guilbeault made the announcement today at the Canadian Space Agency headquarters south of Montreal.

Canada invests $72 million in satellite constellation to monitor active wildfires

Three men in Quebec accused of smuggling people from the U.S. into Canada

Three men in Quebec accused of smuggling people from the U.S. into Canada
The RCMP say three men in Quebec have been charged for helping to smuggle people into Canada from the United States.  During two separate events last year, the three men were intercepted in vehicles near the U.S. border in the Montérégie region southwest of Montreal, allegedly waiting to pick up people who had crossed into Canada illegally. 

Three men in Quebec accused of smuggling people from the U.S. into Canada