Waterloo Region Record

Ontario holding public consultati­on on making spring bear hunt permanent

- MICHELLE MCQUIGGE

TORONTO — A spring black bear hunt could soon be a permanent annual event in Ontario again, the provincial government suggested Friday as it launched a public consultati­on on the idea.

The move would mark a form of departure for the Progressiv­e Conservati­ve government by seeing it formalize a pilot project initiated by the Liberals in 2014, while reversing a position struck by a previous Conservati­ve regime more than two decades earlier.

Natural Resources Minister John Yakabuski described the move as a boon for the province’s economy and tourism sector.

“We are listening to the concerns of northern Ontarians and the tourism industry that an ongoing pilot spring season creates economic uncertaint­y,” Yakabuski said in a statement. “A regular, monitored spring bear hunting season would enable tourism outfitters and camp owners to better plan their operations for the entire year, while also allowing hunters to better plan their activities and support local businesses.”

The spring black bear hunt has been a testy political issue since 1999, when the government led by Progressiv­e Conservati­ve premier Mike Harris cancelled the event. That move was prompted by concern for cubs left orphaned when hunters inadverten­tly shot their mothers.

Pro-hunting organizati­ons began calling for its reinstatem­ent almost immediatel­y, citing an increase in the number of nuisance bear complaints among their reasons.

The Liberal government that took office in 2003 and held power for the next 15 years countered that the spike in complaints was the result of a government education program dubbed Bear Wise, which urged Ontario residents to report any problemati­c encounters with the animals.

Nonetheles­s, the Liberals partially reversed the decision in 2014 by re-establishi­ng a spring hunting season as a pilot project.

The hunt went ahead in every subsequent year, but supporters argued the pilot designatio­n kept its status in flux and put a damper on the outfitting and tourism industry.

Yakabuski said all existing animal protection­s in place during the recent pilot projects would remain in effect under the new proposed rules, including an outright ban on killing bear cubs or mothers with their young during the spring.

For Camille Labchuk, Executive Director of advocacy organizati­on Animal Justice, such measures don’t offer meaningful protection.

She said hunters struggle to distinguis­h between male and female bears even at close range, adding that challenge all but ensures the issue that prompted the cancellati­on in the first place is bound to surface again.

“This is a death warrant for innocent baby bear cubs who will be orphaned and die when their mothers are gunned down by hunters after emerging from hibernatio­n in the spring,” she said. “It’s deeply disappoint­ing that the current government has so little regard for the majestic creatures with whom we share this province.”

Ontario Green Party Leader Mike Schreiner of Guelph sounded similar alarms about the proposal, calling the government’s wildlife conservati­on record “spotty” and urging a broad-based approach to the public consultati­on process.

“Any decision to reinstate a permanent spring hunt must be based on science,” he said in a statement. “Hunting of any species cannot be driven purely by economic interests and should only be considered if the population is healthy. Consultati­ons must include First Nations, scientists, and conservati­onists.”

The government’s proposal also includes tightening commercial guide licensing requiremen­ts.

Members of the public can submit feedback on the Environmen­tal Registry of Ontario until Feb. 18.

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