Ottawa Citizen

Officer who wouldn’t shoot cubs transferre­d

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A conservati­on officer who defied his bosses and refused to euthanize two orphaned bear cubs is being pushed out of his job, but he’s not being fired.

Bryce Casavant won the hearts of animal lovers when he opted not to shoot the baby bears in July after their mother was destroyed for repeatedly raiding homes near Port Hardy, B.C.

Casavant sent the cubs to a wildlife refuge instead.

But the decision earned him a suspension with pay, and now Casavant has been told he will be transferre­d out of the Conservati­on Officer Service.

His union is vowing to fight the move.

“Casavant should not have been suspended, and he should not be transferre­d from his job as a conservati­on officer,” said Stephanie Smith, president of the BC Government and Service Employees Union.

“He has a distinguis­hed record of public service in law enforcemen­t,” she said.

“Bryce Casavant did the right thing when he decided these young bears should be assessed for rehabilita­tion.”

Jamie Edwardson, a spokesman for the B.C. Public Service Agency, said Casavant’s transfer is not a disciplina­ry action against him.

He said Casavant is being moved to an equivalent position within government and that his salary will remain the same.

“We value the contributi­ons of all public service employees,” Edwardson said.

“If an employee is reassigned to a new position, we will offer them assistance as they make the transition to their new role. We want all employees to be successful.”

The union said it will file a grievance against the transfer, in addition to a grievance already filed over Casavant’s original suspension in July. It intends to take both issues to arbitratio­n, although a hearing has not yet been scheduled.

The bears are scheduled to be released in a remote habitat sometime in 2016.

 ??  ?? Bryce Casavant won the hearts of animal lovers when he sent two cubs to a wildlife refuge instead of euthanizin­g them.
Bryce Casavant won the hearts of animal lovers when he sent two cubs to a wildlife refuge instead of euthanizin­g them.

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