Saturday, December 27, 2025
ADVT 
National

Nine Bears Killed In One Week In B.C. Community, Better Garbage Storage Advised

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 24 Aug, 2016 11:12 AM
    REVELSTOKE, B.C. — Residents of a Rocky Mountain community are being chastised after nine black bears were killed in a single week for raiding garbage cans and becoming too accustomed to humans.
     
    The Conservation Officers Service in British Columbia euthanized the problem animals in and around Revelstoke last week, where one animal was brazen enough to approach the downtown.
     
    Gordon Hitchcock, a 28-year-veteran with the conservation service, said it's very unusual for so many bears to be killed in such a short time period. But he insisted the deaths are unnecessary.
     
    "It's avoidable. That's the key message," Hitchcock said Tuesday. "It's pretty much around managing food attractants."
     
    Once they're conditioned to eating garbage, bears become indifferent to people and can no longer simply be transported further into the wild, he said.
     
    Maggie Spizzirri of the Revelstoke Bear Aware Society said it's always a little devastating to see an animal be put down and that it's the community's responsibility to deal properly with items that typically entice bears, such as garbage and fallen fruit.
     
     
    "It's up to the people to make sure their attractants are secure. It's up to the people to maybe nudge their neighbours to do the same. And it's up to the city to make sure they're enforcing these things as well," she said.
     
    Spizzirri said compliance with proper bear-aware practices appears to be on the rise in Revelstoke because residents know there has been more bear activity than usual this year.
     
    "We just have to make sure that that momentum continues in the future so this doesn't happen again," she said.
     
    The animals killed around Revelstoke were all solitary black bears, and the challenge of problem animals isn't restricted to the Rocky Mountains.
     
    "It's an issue that's across most British Columbia, particularly places like Revelstoke that have a natural wildlife corridor," Hitchcock said.
     
     
    He said residents in the community of about 7,000 people need "more of a heightened realization that they're in a wildlife corridor, particularly for bears."
     
    Bears have a built-in fear of humans, but their strong instinct to feed can sometimes override that fear and weaken that natural suspicion, said Hitchcock.
     
    Public education and bylaw enforcement are the two main tools used by the Conservation Officers Service to minimize the threats posed by problem animals.
     
    Hitchcock said he hopes the media attention last week's killings have garnered will make people more aware of the need to secure bear attractants.
     
     
    He also commended the work of groups like Bear Aware and WildSafeBC for their efforts in raising awareness around how to interact safely with wildlife.
     
    "The bottom line is keeping communities safe and bears wild," Hitchcock said.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    22-Year-Old Canadian Jailed For Punching, Kicking Sikh Man in Quebec

    22-Year-Old Canadian Jailed For Punching, Kicking Sikh Man in Quebec
    Gabriel Royer-Tremblay, 22, was convicted of assault for punching and kicking Toronto resident Supninder Singh Khehra on a street in Quebec City in March.

    22-Year-Old Canadian Jailed For Punching, Kicking Sikh Man in Quebec

    Woman, 88, Dies After Driving Tractor That Caught On Fire In Southern Alberta

    Woman, 88, Dies After Driving Tractor That Caught On Fire In Southern Alberta
    BROOKS, Alta. — An 88-year old woman has died after she was severely burned when a tractor and baler caught on fire in southern Alberta. RCMP say they were called to a rural home near Brooks on Sunday afternoon.

    Woman, 88, Dies After Driving Tractor That Caught On Fire In Southern Alberta

    Quebec Man Jumps Into River To Avoid Breathalyzer After Traffic Stop: Police

    Quebec Man Jumps Into River To Avoid Breathalyzer After Traffic Stop: Police
    Quebec provincial police Sgt. Claude Denis said the man was pulled over early Sunday morning after cutting off a patrol vehicle.

    Quebec Man Jumps Into River To Avoid Breathalyzer After Traffic Stop: Police

    Father Mistakenly Drove Over, Killed Boy While Camping In Southern Alberta

    Father Mistakenly Drove Over, Killed Boy While Camping In Southern Alberta
    Mounties say the man and his family had just set up their trailer at the Castle Falls campground near Pincher Creek, south of Calgary, on Thursday night.

    Father Mistakenly Drove Over, Killed Boy While Camping In Southern Alberta

    Homicide Police Arrest Teen Girl After Injured Baby Dies In Saskatoon Hospital

    Homicide Police Arrest Teen Girl After Injured Baby Dies In Saskatoon Hospital
    Officers were called early Sunday to a home in the College Park neighbourhood, where they found the injured boy.

    Homicide Police Arrest Teen Girl After Injured Baby Dies In Saskatoon Hospital

    'Sugarplum' Kelowna Mayor Turns Insult Into An Opportunity To Support LGBTQ Community

    'Sugarplum' Kelowna Mayor Turns Insult Into An Opportunity To Support LGBTQ Community
    Colin Basran, now known as Kelowna's "Sugarplum Mayor," is working with the city's Young Professionals Collective to host a Sugarplum Ball on July 9 to show support for the region's LGBTQ community.

    'Sugarplum' Kelowna Mayor Turns Insult Into An Opportunity To Support LGBTQ Community