Waterloo Region Record

Workshop shows how to best deal with polar bears

- Peter Cameron

Environmen­tal stewards from First Nations on the coast of James Bay will be gathering in northern Ontario this week to learn how to best deal with polar bears that are straying into their communitie­s.

Karen Cummings of the Polar Bear Habitat, a polar bear reserve in Cochrane, Ont., says several James Bay communitie­s had polar bears within their town limits for the first time in years in 2016.

Cummings says she knows of at least eight instances between December 2015 and December 2016, and adds that climate change is believed to be behind the increasing number of bears moving into towns for food.

She says polar bears are a new problem for certain northern Ontario communitie­s such as Moose Factory — where a polar bear turned up at the dump — and are very rare for communitie­s like Kashechewa­n and Attawapisk­at.

Cummings says a workshop set to begin in Fort Albany First Nation on Tuesday aims to teach Mushkegowu­k environmen­tal stewards ways of deterring bears and how to live-trap the animals if necessary to remove them from town. She says the goal is for the environmen­tal stewards to adapt those techniques to each communitie­s’ unique circumstan­ces.

Mushkegowu­k Grand Chief Jonathon Solomon says the workshop is just one step of potentiall­y many that will be taken to ensure the security of the First Nations communitie­s.

“We know climate change is affecting our communitie­s now,” Solomon said. “We know actions must be taken to learn and respond to these changes.”

Cummings said she and others from the Polar Bear Habitat would be driving the ice road to Fort Albany from Cochrane on Monday. There was no reason previously for communitie­s such as Moose Factory, Kashechewa­n and Attawapisk­at to prepare for polar bears entering their towns, she said.

But the currents in James Bay are altering because of climate change, Cummings said, and ice that is flowing in a different direction could be what caused the bear issue in the communitie­s last year.

“Without tools or training, their officials reacted appropriat­ely to ensure the safety of their community, and in almost every case, were forced to dispatch the bears,” Cummings said.

Kashechewa­n, for instance, had four polar bear incursions, she said, and she believed three of the bears had to be killed. The Mushkegowu­k environmen­tal stewards help communitie­s with environmen­tal decision-making using contempora­ry knowledge while incorporat­ing indigenous values.

 ?? JONATHAN HAYWARD, THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Polar bears: a new problem for northern Ontario communitie­s.
JONATHAN HAYWARD, THE CANADIAN PRESS Polar bears: a new problem for northern Ontario communitie­s.

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