Times Colonist

Oak Bay earmarks $40,000 for deer

Municipali­ty mulls relocation program and contracept­ion

- BILL CLEVERLEY

Oak Bay has earmarked $40,000 in its budget for deer management this year and may investigat­e relocation as a method of population control, Mayor Nils Jensen says.

“When we went into the pilot project last year, we really only had one option available to us according to the guidance we received from the provincial government, and that was a cull,” Jensen said.

Since then, provincial policy about relocating deer has changed, he said. “So that may be an option for us.”

Under a pilot project to begin this year, mule deer are to be captured in Elkford, Cranbrook, Kimberley and Invermere and transporte­d to winter range areas in the East Kootenay region, where natural non-urban mule deer population­s have been in decline, says an Oak Bay staff report.

Jensen said getting a relocation program up and running will be time-consuming.

“One of the concerns we’ll have is whether or not we have the staff capacity to put a program like that together,” he said. “There’s lots of challenges, not the least of which is: If we are permitted to relocate, where do we relocate to?”

Oak Bay has taken a lead in the capital region in trying to manage urban deer. Since 2013, the Capital Regional District and Oak Bay have spent a combined $270,000 for two deer-management pilot projects — one in Central Saanich and one in Oak Bay.

Eleven deer were killed in Oak Bay’s cull, prompting protests. The deer were trapped on private property and killed with a bolt gun.

Jensen said Oak Bay will also consider contracept­ive immunizati­on injections and look at applying for some of the $100,000 in funding the province has committed for urban deer management.

The Urban Wildlife Stewardshi­p Society made a proposal to Oak Bay last year to capture, tag and release deer in the municipali­ty and to sterilize 25 does with the contracept­ive vaccine SpayVac.

Oak Bay set aside $5,000 toward the initiative. The municipali­ty released half the funds in July and will release the balance once the society obtains the necessary permits.

Four deer counts conducted in Oak Bay between Oct. 23 and Nov. 13 last year found between 48 and 55 deer. The counts suggested there was one deer for every two kilometres of street. Sixty per cent were females and they appeared to be in good condition.

Oak Bay councillor­s will discuss the issue at a Feb. 15 committee of the whole meeting.

Jensen said there seems to be agreement that there is an overpopula­tion of deer and that a management plan is needed.

“That doesn’t seem to be subject to any opposition at this point,” he said.

“I think what council could benefit from, certainly, is having a better understand­ing of what the contracept­ive immunizati­on program would look like and how much it would cost and the effectiven­ess of it.”

 ??  ?? Deer counts conducted in Oak Bay last year found between 48 and 55 deer.
Deer counts conducted in Oak Bay last year found between 48 and 55 deer.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada