Close X
Tuesday, October 15, 2024
ADVT 
National

2,000 Sightings Prompt Sudbury Officials To Create Nuisance Bear Committee

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 13 Oct, 2015 10:20 AM
  • 2,000 Sightings Prompt Sudbury Officials To Create Nuisance Bear Committee
SUDBURY, Ont. — Residents of Sudbury, Ont., just can't bear it anymore.
 
City officials have set up a committee of experts in an effort to find a solution to an influx of unwelcome black bears, known as "nuisance bears."
 
Coun. Al Sizer, a member of the committee, said Monday that the Ministry of Natural Resources and Forestry has received 2,200 reports of bear-sightings in the city, and police said they've received an additional 1,700 bear complaints, four times more than the previous summer.
 
Sizer said Sudbury accounted for nearly half of the province's complaints about nuisance bears this summer. In fact, reporting nuisance bears is the first option in the phone directory at the Sudbury office of the Ministry.
 
He said the committee is made up of 10 people, including representatives from the police force and the ministry, as well as local environmentalists. They even have a member with a PhD in the history of bears.
 
So far, the committee has met three times since it was formed last month.
 
And while nobody in Sudbury has been hurt by bears this year, Sizer said it's always a risk.
 
"You don't know what kind of a day the bear's having," Sizer said. "I mean, if it's having a toothache and it encounters somebody, it may not be real friendly."
 
Sudbury police only dispatch officers when they determine there's a risk to the public, said Staff Sgt. Craig Maki. That's happened 500 times this year, and it's eaten up 225 hours of police time. They've had to kill eight bears.
 
The committee is chalking the invasion up to a poor blueberry crop, Maki said. Bears are left with no option but to look for alternate food sources, and human food is all too convenient.
 
"If you can eliminate the human food sources, then you're solving some of your problems," he said.
 
But Maki isn't part of the city's bear committee.
 
"Thank goodness," he added. "I've had my fill of bears this summer, to be honest."
 
Maki said he's had two bears in his backyard this summer, and estimates they weighed about 175 kilograms each.

MORE National ARTICLES

Vancouver Pot Regulations Will Restrict Patient Access: Civil Liberties' Group

Vancouver Pot Regulations Will Restrict Patient Access: Civil Liberties' Group
VANCOUVER — The British Columbia Civil Liberties Association is applauding Vancouver city council for regulating medical marijuana dispensaries but is warning the new bylaws are too restrictive.

Vancouver Pot Regulations Will Restrict Patient Access: Civil Liberties' Group

HarperPac Much-needed Counterbalance: Former Adviser To PM Harper

HarperPac Much-needed Counterbalance: Former Adviser To PM Harper
OTTAWA — A former adviser to Prime Minister Stephen Harper says he's not surprised to see right-leaning political organizers fighting back against union-financed third-party groups on the left.

HarperPac Much-needed Counterbalance: Former Adviser To PM Harper

Police Seek Deadly Cafe Shooting Suspect North Of Toronto

Police Seek Deadly Cafe Shooting Suspect North Of Toronto
Police have released security video images of a suspect and vehicle in a cafe shooting north of Toronto that left two people dead and two others seriously injured.

Police Seek Deadly Cafe Shooting Suspect North Of Toronto

B.C. Gets Go-ahead To Pursue Polygamy Charge Against Bountiful Leader

The leader of a fundamentalist Mormon sect in southeastern B.C. is accused of polygamy for having more than two dozen wives.

B.C. Gets Go-ahead To Pursue Polygamy Charge Against Bountiful Leader

Environment Lawyers Challenge B.C.'s Kinder Morgan Pipeline Conditions

VANCOUVER — A group of environmental lawyers is calling on the British Columbia government to do its own evaluation of Kinder Morgan's proposed $5.4-billion pipeline expansion instead of deferring its questions to the National Energy Board.

Environment Lawyers Challenge B.C.'s Kinder Morgan Pipeline Conditions

Saskatchewan Premier Says '60s Scoop Apology Is On The Way, But No Compensation

Saskatchewan Premier Says '60s Scoop Apology Is On The Way, But No Compensation
SASKATOON — Saskatchewan Premier Brad Wall says the province will formally apologize for decades-old policies that saw aboriginal adoptees taken from their homes and placed with non-native families.

Saskatchewan Premier Says '60s Scoop Apology Is On The Way, But No Compensation