Times Colonist

Park board lacked authority to ban whales, dolphins: court

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Vancouver’s park board did not have the authority to ban whales, dolphins and porpoises at the city’s aquarium, a B.C. judge has ruled.

The B.C. Supreme Court decision released Friday follows the Vancouver Aquarium’s announceme­nt last month that it will end the practice of displaying cetaceans in captivity.

The Ocean Wise Conservati­on Associatio­n, a non-profit society that runs the aquarium, filed an applicatio­n for judicial review last year challengin­g a bylaw amendment passed by the park board prohibitin­g the keeping of cetaceans in parks.

The aquarium has a licensing agreement with the park board that allows it to operate in Stanley Park, and it was renewed in 1999 to include “non-interferen­ce.”

Justice Andrew Mayer said in his ruling the agreement states the board will not interfere with the day-to-day administra­tion of the aquarium, and, as a result, the bylaw amendment is unenforcea­ble.

“In my view, when an administra­tive body begins to trench into areas of ethics, morality and perhaps even animal rights, it may overstep its bounds if it adopts a political position which conflicts with its core mandates,” he said in his written ruling.

The board approved the aquarium’s $100-million expansion plan in 1996 and made several other agreements in subsequent years that didn’t remove the non-interferen­ce provisions, Mayer said.

The aquarium planned to create larger outdoor pools for beluga whales, sea lions and dolphins, and upgrade its building.

The judge said the bylaw “effectivel­y undoes the park board’s approval of the expansion project” because the aquarium would be prohibited from using the expanded facilities for its intended purposes.

The Vancouver Board of Parks and Recreation issued a statement saying it was “obviously disappoint­ed with the conclusion the court reached in the matter.”

It said the board would be reviewing the reasons and would consider its options.

The debate over holding cetaceans at the aquarium has been brewing for decades, but the heat was turned up when two of the aquarium’s belugas died in 2016.

Since then, a false killer whale named Chester, and Daisy, a harbour porpoise, have also died at the facility.

The Vancouver Aquarium said in a statement that it is pleased with the decision.

“We will need to take the time necessary to review the judgment with our legal counsel and consider the implicatio­ns it may have on our organizati­on before determinin­g our future course of action or making any further public statements about these matters,” the statement says.

The aquarium announced in January it would end the display of cetaceans because the controvers­y and distractio­n surroundin­g the issue had begun to limit its ability to pursue its ocean conservati­on mission.

The aquarium had previously said it would phase out its cetacean program by 2029, after it brought in five new belugas.

The judge stopped short of quashing the bylaw, saying the board was authorized to enact such amendments as long as it didn’t apply to the Marine Science Centre in Stanley Park.

Animal Justice, an intervener in the case, said in a statement that the curtain is closing on whale and dolphins being kept in capacity, noting that a bill banning captivity and breeding of cetaceans in Canada is moving through Parliament.

“It is clear that whale and dolphin captivity is an archaic, dying practice that will soon be outlawed,” the statement said.

 ??  ?? Qila, a beluga whale, receives herring from a trainer at the Vancouver Aquarium in 2011. The aquarium announced last month that it will end the practice of displaying cetaceans in captivity.
Qila, a beluga whale, receives herring from a trainer at the Vancouver Aquarium in 2011. The aquarium announced last month that it will end the practice of displaying cetaceans in captivity.

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