The Hamilton Spectator

End of horse-drawn carriages in Montreal

- MORGAN LOWRIE

MONTREAL — The elegant draft horses that pull tourist caleches through Old Montreal will soon be clip-clopping their way into the city’s history books as the municipal administra­tion moves forward with a plan to ban the activity as of 2020.

City Coun. Craig Sauve said Thursday he’s introducin­g a regulation to end the horsedrawn carriages amid a growing concern over the welfare of the animals, despite tighter rules imposed on the industry in recent years.

“The conclusion­s are clear: the unfortunat­e incidents involving horses and caleches have continued to occur,” he told a news conference.

There have been at least four accidents involving carriage horses since 2014, as well as several hundred citizen complaints over the treatment of the horses, according to data provided by the city.

There were also 14 tickets given out in 2016 and 2017 for infraction­s related to horse health and the state of the carriages.

The city’s new regulation would prohibit horse-drawn carriages anywhere on Montreal’s territory as of Dec. 21, 2019.

Sauve said the timeline would give drivers and owners enough time find other work, noting the administra­tion had been promising to end the carriage horse industry since the municipal election campaign last fall.

“We see there have been a lot of cases of horses being mistreated, horses dying while doing their caleche activities,” Sauve said.

“We promised in the campaign to put an end to this industry, and we’re giving them a year and a half to adjust and we think that’s enough time.”

The city also unveiled its revamped animal-control bylaw, six months after overturnin­g the previous administra­tion’s ban on pit bull-type dogs.

Former mayor Denis Coderre enacted the pit bull ban in 2016 after a 55-year-old Montreal woman died after a dog attack. Mayor Valerie Plante’s administra­tion revoked the controvers­ial ban in December.

The bylaw also introduces mandatory sterilizat­ion of dogs, cats and rabbits and will require pet stores to sell only rescued animals.

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