Wednesday, December 31, 2025
ADVT 
National

Legal action launched against B.C.'s wolf cull

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 22 Jul, 2020 07:13 PM
  • Legal action launched against B.C.'s wolf cull

A British Columbia environmental group has launched a legal petition alleging the provincial government's wolf kill to save caribou is breaking federal and provincial laws.

Pacific Wild Alliance wants a B.C. Supreme Court to declare that the province doesn't have the authority to use a helicopter to hunt wolves under the Wildlife Act and Canadian Aviation Security Regulations.

The petition to the court, filed early this month, says it wants a judge to quash any permits issued for the wolf cull.

None of the claims have been tested in court, and no one from the B.C. government was immediately available for comment about the legal action.

A recent study by Raincoast Conservation Foundation and the universities of Alberta, British Columbia, and Victoria said the wolf kill in Western Canada has had "no detectable effect'' on reversing the decline of endangered caribou populations.

The petition says it wants the court to clarify the law as it applies to the killing of a vulnerable wolf population in B.C.

MORE National ARTICLES

Group of First Nations want Supreme Court to hear appeal on Trans Mountain First Nations go to Supreme Court on pipeline case

VANCOUVER - A group of British Columbia First Nations is seeking to challenge the federal government's second approval of the Trans Mountain pipeline expansion project in Canada's highest court.    

Group of First Nations want Supreme Court to hear appeal on Trans Mountain First Nations go to Supreme Court on pipeline case

RCMP say man shot and killed in early morning attack in Surrey, B.C.

SURREY, B.C. — RCMP say a man has been shot and killed in Surrey, B.C.   Police say officers were called to the Whalley neighbourhood just before 1 a.m. for a report of shots fired.  

RCMP say man shot and killed in early morning attack in Surrey, B.C.

Finding ways to socialize while keeping distant? Loopholes not worth the risk

Setting up lawn chairs in driveways for socially-distant neighbourhood parties. Talking to one another from apartment building balconies. Driving to parking lots to chat from cars parked two metres apart.

Finding ways to socialize while keeping distant? Loopholes not worth the risk

Sex. Drugs. Virus. Venezuela elites still party in pandemic

MIAMI — They whiled away the week on a sex- and drug-fueled romp: dancing on white-sand beaches and frolicking on a paradisaical Caribbean island with prostitutes from Europe, some snapping selfies with famous reggaeton artists.

Sex. Drugs. Virus. Venezuela elites still party in pandemic

VIRUS DIARY: In Beijing, finally, a tentative spring blooms

BEIJING — The coronavirus came first in the depths of winter. As with so many places afterward, the change seeped in gradually.

VIRUS DIARY: In Beijing, finally, a tentative spring blooms

Canadian companies promise 30,000 ventilators on way, Trudeau says

OTTAWA — Prime Minister Justin Trudeau says Canada has ordered 30,000 new ventilators from Canadian companies but hopes that will end up being far more than this country will actually need.

Canadian companies promise 30,000 ventilators on way, Trudeau says