Close X
Sunday, October 13, 2024
ADVT 
National

Opponents Of B.C.'s Controversial Wolf Cull Take Fight Against Province To Court

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 20 Jan, 2016 12:30 PM
  • Opponents Of B.C.'s Controversial Wolf Cull Take Fight Against Province To Court
VANCOUVER — Two environmental groups say they're taking their fight against British Columbia's controversial wolf cull to court.
 
Pacific Wild and Valhalla Wilderness Society say they have filed an application for a judicial review that's intended to determine whether the cull constitutes proper wolf management.
 
The government has argued the cull is needed to protect threatened caribou herds, and during its first year last winter, sharpshooters in helicopters killed 84 wolves in the province's northeast and southeast regions.
 
But the shootings proved to be controversial and drew the attention of such celebrities as Miley Cyrus and Pamela Anderson who called for the government to end the cull.
 
The coalition says it has filed the application in anticipation of the province issuing new permits in the South Selkirk region.
 
Pacific Wild and Valhalla Wilderness Society say a West Coast Environmental Law fund and a crowd-sourcing campaign are financing the initial phase of the court fight.
 
"To date, the province has neglected to protect and restore sufficient habitat for endangered caribou," says Ian McAllister of Pacific Wild.
 
"We are asking the court to review whether, in the absence of sufficient, enforced habitat protection, culling wolves constitutes 'proper wildlife management.'"

MORE National ARTICLES

Fate Of Heart-Wrenching Residential School Abuse Stories Hangs In Balance

Fate Of Heart-Wrenching Residential School Abuse Stories Hangs In Balance
On one side of the two-day hearing are those who argue a lower court judge was right to order the material destroyed in due course. On the other are those who believe it should be kept in perpetuity under appropriate lock and key.

Fate Of Heart-Wrenching Residential School Abuse Stories Hangs In Balance

Psychiatrist Tells Guy Turcotte's Trial He Was Anxious, Suicidal After Arrest

The first psychiatrist to see Guy Turcotte after his arrest and transfer to a mental hospital in 2009 says he diagnosed him with an anxiety adjustment disorder and says he was in a suicidal state.

Psychiatrist Tells Guy Turcotte's Trial He Was Anxious, Suicidal After Arrest

This B.C. Couple Hoping For One Baby Gets One-In-50-Million Triplets Surprise

This B.C. Couple Hoping For One Baby Gets One-In-50-Million Triplets Surprise
For Mahalia Meeuwsen and her husband Mike, just having one baby seemed like a miracle.

This B.C. Couple Hoping For One Baby Gets One-In-50-Million Triplets Surprise

Justin Trudeau And Family To Live In Rideau Cottage, Not 24 Sussex

Justin Trudeau And Family To Live In Rideau Cottage, Not 24 Sussex
The cottage is actually a two-storey Georgian Revival brick home built in 1866-67 to serve as a home for the secretary to the governor general

Justin Trudeau And Family To Live In Rideau Cottage, Not 24 Sussex

Indian-Canadian Son Charged With Murdering 41-Year-Old Mother In Mississauga

Indian-Canadian Son Charged With Murdering 41-Year-Old Mother In Mississauga
Kunal Bhavan, 20, was arrested and charged with second-degree murder for the death of his 41-year-old mother Vaishali Patel 

Indian-Canadian Son Charged With Murdering 41-Year-Old Mother In Mississauga

CMHC Expects Housing Market To Moderate; Starts, Sales To Slow In 2016 And 2017

CMHC Expects Housing Market To Moderate; Starts, Sales To Slow In 2016 And 2017
The average MLS price is forecast at between $417,000 and $459,000 this year with a point forecast of $437,700, before rising to between $420,000 and $466,000 in 2016

CMHC Expects Housing Market To Moderate; Starts, Sales To Slow In 2016 And 2017