Vancouver Sun

Big flock of chickens ruffles neighbours’ feathers

- KATIE DeROSA

VICTORIA Chantal Meagher and Phil Calvert stand on the back deck of their Rockland home and watch constructi­on workers erect a third chicken coop in their neighbour’s backyard.

There were only five hens ambling about in the sunshine on Thursday but their neighbour, Wei Tu, told the Victoria Times Colonist she plans to bring in 100 by Saturday.

“A few chickens is not a big deal,” Calvert said. “But 100 is a problem.”

Meagher worries the chickens will bring rats and vermin and become a public health issue.

Tu operates a 35-unit rooming house in a heritage home at 1322 Rockland Ave. which she said is primarily occupied by low-income tenants.

With the intention of providing her tenants two fresh eggs a day, Tu purchased the chickens from a farm in Duncan.

Tu said the 2.2-acre property, part of which has been covered over with dirt, is big enough to support that many chickens.

City of Victoria councillor­s on Thursday agreed to amend the animal-control bylaw to limit the number of backyard hens to 12. The new rules require the person keeping the hens to live on the property.

Coun. Pam Madoff said councillor­s agreed on the dozen-hen limit after she spoke with urban farmers who said that’s the optimal number for feeding a family.

“One of the main things to consider is we’re in an urban setting, not a rural setting,” Madoff said. “Once you get to 100 you actually become a farm.”

Tu said if a family is able to have access to 12 hens, her tenants should have a proportion­ate number. The businesswo­man, who owns Tenor Tile & Carpet, does not live on the property.

The new bylaw has not been passed, so if Tu brings in the chickens this weekend, she will not be running afoul of any rules.

Meagher and Calvert were already worried when they saw a row of open-air compost bins erected on the other side of the black chainlink fence that separates their property from Tu’s. Two weeks ago, the wood and corrugated metal chicken coops started going up.

Meagher said she believes Tu is trying to “weaponize” the property to make it deliberate­ly unpleasant for neighbours.

“It smacks of the cattle battle,” Meagher said, referring to the controvers­ial cattle feedlot in a Gordon Head neighbourh­ood that was set up after the owners, Gordon and Don Alberg, were unable to subdivide the property.

Just over a decade ago, Tu applied to rezone the property so she could build two four-storey, 11-unit condo buildings and six townhouses. That rezoning applicatio­n was turned down by the city. Tu told the Times Colonist in 2006 that the developmen­t would pay for badly needed restoratio­ns to the heritage mansion.

Thetwo-and-a-half-storeymixe­d Queen Anne and Tudor-style mansion was built in 1894, making it older than the B.C. legislatur­e buildings. The 8,000-square-foot mansion, with 10 fireplaces, was built for Hewitt Bostock, founder of the Vancouver Province. Socialite Kathleen Agnew donated it to the Anglican Church Women of the Diocese of B.C., who operated a nursing home between 1950 and 1998.

Meagher said that in the time it takes for the animal-control bylaw to pass, the chickens will already be in their place and will be difficult to remove.

We’re in an urban setting, not a rural setting. Once you get to 100 you actually become a farm.

 ?? ADRIAN LAM ?? Chantal Meagher of Rockland is concerned about a neighbour’s plan to rear 100 chickens next door. The neighbour, who operates a 35-unit rooming house, plans to provide eggs for her low-income tenants.
ADRIAN LAM Chantal Meagher of Rockland is concerned about a neighbour’s plan to rear 100 chickens next door. The neighbour, who operates a 35-unit rooming house, plans to provide eggs for her low-income tenants.

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