Montreal mayor: City implementing measures amid three coyote attacks
MONTREAL — The City of Montreal is taking all necessary steps to track down a coyote that is believed to have attacked three young children in the past week, Montreal’s mayor said Monday.
Valerie Plante told reporters the city is working with a private firm contracted to track and bait coyotes — in particular those animals that might be sick and can become problematic or aggressive.
In the wake of last week’s attacks, the city announced it has installed cameras and bait while increasing the presence of municipal workers as part of a “scaring campaign” in the north-end borough of Ahuntsic-Cartierville where the incidents occurred.
Three children, two boys and a girl all five and under, were treated for minor injuries after coming across the wild animals.
Plante said simply removing them from the island won’t work.
“The coyotes are here, we can’t just get rid of them,” Plante said. “It would just create more problems and they would just come back.”
The city launched a coyote management program earlier this year amid a marked rise in the number of sightings — about 600 in just under a year.
Montreal joined other major Canadian cities in introducing a coyote hotline this year, allowing people to call in if they see one of the animals.
Although coyotes have been a part of the city’s landscape for decades, the number of sightings in residential areas has increased greatly.
Coyotes are generally fearful of humans and have a nocturnal lifestyle. They are not generally aggressive, and it’s unclear what triggers the most recent attacks.