Close X
Tuesday, September 24, 2024
ADVT 
National

BC Conservation Officer Bryce Casavant Suspended After Failing To Put Down Bear Cubs

The Canadian Press, 08 Jul, 2015 11:34 AM
    PORT HARDY, B.C. — A B.C. Conservation officer has been suspended without pay after he reportedly refused an order to put down two bear cubs last weekend.
     
    The cubs were orphaned after their mother was destroyed for breaking into a meat freezer inside a mobile home in Port Hardy on Vancouver Island.
     
    After tranquilizing the cubs, Bryce Casavant brought them to a vet to be checked out and then to the North Island Wildlife Recovery Association operated by Robin Campbell.
     
    Campbell says the bears, believed to be around eight weeks old, were at the home only because they were looking for their mother.
     
    An online petition has been launched by the association calling on B.C. Environment Minister Mary Polak to reinstate Casavant.
     
    The petition had collected well over 17,000 names by early Wednesday.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    B.C. Ferries Crew Rescues Kayaker From Water Off Vancouver Island

    B.C. Ferries Crew Rescues Kayaker From Water Off Vancouver Island
    The Canadian Coast Guard asked for help at about 9:45 p.m. Friday from the MV Quinitsa with a search and rescue operation for a female kayaker.

    B.C. Ferries Crew Rescues Kayaker From Water Off Vancouver Island

    Judge Orders Translink To Pay Langley Commuter $90,000 For Back-Breaking Bus Ride

    Judge Orders Translink To Pay Langley Commuter $90,000 For Back-Breaking Bus Ride
    The 65-year-old Langley resident Mark Hutchinson's was commuting to his job in Delta when his bus hit a bump, throwing him into the air and breaking his vertebra in his lower back when he landed

    Judge Orders Translink To Pay Langley Commuter $90,000 For Back-Breaking Bus Ride

    B.C. Courts Stays Vancouver Woman's Class-Action Lawsuit Against Facebook Over Privacy Concerns

    B.C. Courts Stays Vancouver Woman's Class-Action Lawsuit Against Facebook Over Privacy Concerns
    Deborah Douez alleged the product known as Sponsored Stories used the names and images of Facebook members without their consent, breaching Section 4 of B.C.'s Privacy Act.

    B.C. Courts Stays Vancouver Woman's Class-Action Lawsuit Against Facebook Over Privacy Concerns

    Higher Net Earnings Needed To Replace Aging Ships: BC Ferries President

    Higher Net Earnings Needed To Replace Aging Ships: BC Ferries President
    VICTORIA — BC Ferries has announced a $30-million jump in net earnings so far this fiscal year compared to the same period in 2014.

    Higher Net Earnings Needed To Replace Aging Ships: BC Ferries President

    B.C. To Devote One Teacher Professional Day To Aboriginal Education

    VICTORIA — Teachers in British Columbia will devote one of their professional development days next year to aboriginal education, the education minister said Friday.

    B.C. To Devote One Teacher Professional Day To Aboriginal Education

    UBC To Open Peter P. Dhillon Centre For Business Ethics

    UBC To Open Peter P. Dhillon Centre For Business Ethics
    Peter Dhillon, CEO of the Richberry Group of Companies - Canada’s largest grower of cranberries, is partnering with the University of British Columbia (UBC) to establish the Peter P. Dhillon Centre for Business Ethics

    UBC To Open Peter P. Dhillon Centre For Business Ethics