Close X
Friday, November 15, 2024
ADVT 
National

Culling Of Fawns In Cranbrook, B.C., Infuriates Deer Protection Society

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 15 Jan, 2016 12:44 PM
    CRANBROOK, B.C. — The B.C. Deer Protection Society is furious about what it says is a cull of deer, conducted without any notification, in southeastern B.C., near Cranbrook.
     
    The society and the Animal Alliance of Canada have lodged formal complaints with the Minister of Forests, Lands and Natural Resource Operations.
     
    Both groups allege fawns were captured in clover traps — large netted traps that allow deer to enter but not escape — and remained in the traps for hours before contractors arrived to euthanize them using a bolt gun.
     
    In one case, the society alleges contractors shot a fawn twice, but it was still kicking as they dragged it away for disposal.
     
    Cranbrook Mayor Lee Pratt says Cranbrook has a permit to cull urban deer but he refused comment on the latest allegations.
     
    Culling of urban, habituated deer has caused controversy on Vancouver Island and across the southern Interior, with advocates saying deer threaten humans, pets and infrastructure, while critics point to non-lethal methods to reduce deer numbers.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Canadian Inflation Accelerates To 1.4% As Oil Slump's Price Pressure Eases

    Canadian Inflation Accelerates To 1.4% As Oil Slump's Price Pressure Eases
    OTTAWA — The country's annual inflation rate picked up the pace last month to 1.4 per cent as the influence of last year's oil-price plunge faded in the economic data.

    Canadian Inflation Accelerates To 1.4% As Oil Slump's Price Pressure Eases

    Motherisk Drug And Alcohol Testing Program 'Inadequate And Unreliable': Review

    Motherisk Drug And Alcohol Testing Program 'Inadequate And Unreliable': Review
    TORONTO — A controversial program that uses hair analysis to test for drug and alcohol use in thousands of child protection and criminal cases was deemed "inadequate and unreliable" in a government-commissioned report released Thursday.

    Motherisk Drug And Alcohol Testing Program 'Inadequate And Unreliable': Review

    New Brunswick Minister Seeking Second Opinion About Funding For Expensive Drug

    New Brunswick Minister Seeking Second Opinion About Funding For Expensive Drug
    FREDERICTON — New Brunswick's health minister says he will seek a second opinion about the province's decision not to pay for an expensive drug that could help a 10-year-old boy suffering from a rare genetic disorder.

    New Brunswick Minister Seeking Second Opinion About Funding For Expensive Drug

    Quebec Government In Court To Appeal Injunction Against Assisted-dying Law

    Quebec Government In Court To Appeal Injunction Against Assisted-dying Law
    MONTREAL — Quebec government lawyers will be in court today to appeal an injunction that was aimed at blocking a provincial law on assisted dying. 

    Quebec Government In Court To Appeal Injunction Against Assisted-dying Law

    Valiant US Sikh Store-Owner, 59, Fights Off Armed Robber With Only Slipper

    Valiant US Sikh Store-Owner, 59, Fights Off Armed Robber With Only Slipper
    In a feat caught on surveillance cameras, the 59-year-old Amrik Singh fought off a shotgun-wielding masked robber using only his slipper in the store at his petrol station in Staatsburg, about 150 km from New York City.

    Valiant US Sikh Store-Owner, 59, Fights Off Armed Robber With Only Slipper

    Police Seek Cheetah Spotted Along Southeast B.C. Highway 3A Near Creston

    Police Seek Cheetah Spotted Along Southeast B.C. Highway 3A Near Creston
    RCMP in Creston said the cheetah was spotted along Highway 3A on Thursday at about 4:30 p.m. in the Crawford Bay and Kootenay Bay areas.

    Police Seek Cheetah Spotted Along Southeast B.C. Highway 3A Near Creston