Tuesday, July 7, 2026
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

B.C. Moves On Consumer Protections With Payday Loan Law Amendments

B.C. Moves On Consumer Protections With Payday Loan Law Amendments
VICTORIA — British Columbia is amending consumer protection law to offer more safeguards for people forced to turn to high-cost loan services and risk being caught in an endless cycle of debt payments.

B.C. Moves On Consumer Protections With Payday Loan Law Amendments

Liberals' Bump In Child Benefits Fuels Poverty Rate Drop, Statistics Canada Says

OTTAWA — The national statistics office says fewer children are living in poverty and it is connecting the drop to the Liberal government's signature child benefit.

Liberals' Bump In Child Benefits Fuels Poverty Rate Drop, Statistics Canada Says

Former Guantanamo Bay Prisoner Omar Khadr Wants Court To Rule Sentence Expired

EDMONTON — Former Guantanamo Bay prisoner Omar Khadr is asking an Alberta court to declare his eight-year sentence for war crimes to have expired.

Former Guantanamo Bay Prisoner Omar Khadr Wants Court To Rule Sentence Expired

Crown Seeks Six Years For Ontario Man Pamir Hakimzadah Who Tried To Join ISIL In Syria

TORONTO — Ontario prosecutors want a Toronto man who tried to join Islamic State militants in Syria to be sentenced to six years behind bars.    

Crown Seeks Six Years For Ontario Man Pamir Hakimzadah Who Tried To Join ISIL In Syria

Snowboarder Safe After Chilly Evening Lost Near Cypress Resort In West Vancouver

Snowboarder Safe After Chilly Evening Lost Near Cypress Resort In West Vancouver
VANCOUVER — A snowboarder was cold but unhurt as he was rescued Monday night after going out of bounds at the Cypress Mountain Resort in West Vancouver.

Snowboarder Safe After Chilly Evening Lost Near Cypress Resort In West Vancouver

Two Women Hurt, Driver Also Assessed After Van Veers Onto Curb In Vancouver

Two Women Hurt, Driver Also Assessed After Van Veers Onto Curb In Vancouver
Two pedestrians are recovering from serious injuries after being hit when a vehicle jumped a curb in Vancouver.  

Two Women Hurt, Driver Also Assessed After Van Veers Onto Curb In Vancouver