Friday, December 19, 2025
ADVT 
National

Toronto Police Bring In Reinforcements In Feud With Endangered Birds

The Canadian Press, 03 Mar, 2016 11:02 AM
    Toronto police are bringing reinforcements in an ongoing battle to rid their boathouse of winged invaders they say pose a threat to officers' — and possibly the public's — safety.
     
    For years, the force's marine unit has struggled to deal with an infestation of barn swallows, which nest in the boathouse and leave it covered in droppings.
     
    The birds are a protected species and cannot be disturbed during nesting season. Moving their nests requires permission from the provincial Ministry of Natural Resources.
     
    In a letter to city officials last year, the Toronto Police Services Board called for prompt action on what it called an issue with "potential impacts on operational resources and public safety, as well as on the health and safety of members of the Marine Unit."
     
    The infestation "necessitates costly cleaning operations and utilizes the resources of the unit unnecessarily," the letter said.
     
    "It can also have an adverse effect on public safety as it can at times impede emergency response due to the need to remove bird feces from boats and equipment."
     
    The droppings can also increase the risk of exposure to some diseases, it said.
     
    A new three-year project set to begin this month aims to find the birds a new home and discourage them from returning to their current nesting grounds, a spokeswoman for the city said.
     
    Officers will have to deal with their unwelcome guests at least another season, however: the first year of the project consists mainly of consulting with experts and surveying the barn swallow population, Natasha Hinds Fitzimmins said in an email.
     
    Next year, an alternate nesting site will be set up within a kilometre of the boathouse, as laid out in the ministry's requirements, she said.
     
    Existing nests will also be removed and additional measures taken to deter the birds from returning, she said.
     
    The last year will be spent surveying the birds to see how they respond to the change.
     
    "The modifications to the nesting situation will need to be monitored year after year to determine the success of the nesting relocation and barn swallow population," Hinds Fitzimmins said.
     
    In the meantime, she said, "the best course of action to reduce the chance of bird infestation has been and continues to be to keep the doors closed, especially during periods of bird migration."
     
    Robert Duncan, a program co-ordinator for the Toronto police occupational health and safety unit, said that was "the first thing they looked at" but it didn't work.
     
    "They're quite small birds and unfortunately because the water levels fluctuate the birds were just getting underneath the doors even when they're fully dropped," he said.
     
    "The other problem, of course, is that because they're an emergency response unit, having the doors closed can slow down the response to an emergency call, so that's a public safety consideration we had to make."
     
    He said police don't want to harm the birds, just evict them.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Judge Strikes Down Law Barring Patients From Growing Medical Marijuana

    Judge Strikes Down Law Barring Patients From Growing Medical Marijuana
    A Federal Court judge has ruled that medical marijuana patients have the right to grow their own cannabis.

    Judge Strikes Down Law Barring Patients From Growing Medical Marijuana

    Vancouver Study Of Stroke Survivors Between 19 And 85 To Use Hyperbaric Chamber

    Vancouver Study Of Stroke Survivors Between 19 And 85 To Use Hyperbaric Chamber
    The Vancouver Coastal Health Authority says the first such study in North America will involve patients lying in a hyperbaric oxygen chamber for 40 treatments, each lasting about two hours.

    Vancouver Study Of Stroke Survivors Between 19 And 85 To Use Hyperbaric Chamber

    'We Are In A State Of Shock:' First Nations Declare Health Emergency

    'We Are In A State Of Shock:' First Nations Declare Health Emergency
    The declaration — essentially a desperate plea for help — calls for urgent action from the federal and provincial governments to address a crisis they said has resulted in needless suffering and deaths.

    'We Are In A State Of Shock:' First Nations Declare Health Emergency

    Tiny Western Toads Put Economic, Environmental Squeeze On Village Of Nakusp

    Tiny Western Toads Put Economic, Environmental Squeeze On Village Of Nakusp
    The western toad migration near the Village of Nakusp attracts tourists every summer to the Toad Festival at Summit Lake, where people fill buckets with the toads and carry them safely across Highway 6 to forest habitat.

    Tiny Western Toads Put Economic, Environmental Squeeze On Village Of Nakusp

    Quebec Man Facing Charges In Arizona After 62 Kilograms Of Cocaine Found In Car

    Quebec Man Facing Charges In Arizona After 62 Kilograms Of Cocaine Found In Car
    Girolamo Del Balso faces a number of felony charges including possession of narcotics for sale and transporting narcotics for sale

    Quebec Man Facing Charges In Arizona After 62 Kilograms Of Cocaine Found In Car

    Quebec's Top Court Rejects Lise Thibault Appeal; 18-Month Prison Term Stands

    Thibault, 76, was sentenced last fall to 18 months in jail for fraud and breach of trust.

    Quebec's Top Court Rejects Lise Thibault Appeal; 18-Month Prison Term Stands