Hartford Courant

Plan to kill geese on pause in Bristol

Residents speak out on both sides at parks board meeting

- By Kaitlin Mccallum

Tears, shouts and interrupti­ons marked residents’ comments Wednesday night over a proposal to exterminat­e geese in Bristol parks.

As the city’s Board of Parks considered a proposal to kill resident geese that are causing excessive waste that is marring Veterans Memorial Park, dozens of residents shared conflictin­g opinions on how the city should proceed.

One decried that “mass execution” could take place at the park dedicated to freedom and another objected that the proposed means using nets to round up and to use gas to euthanize the flocks and that would cause the geese to suffer for up to 45 minutes before they died.

Some speakers, though, said the excrement defiles the sanctity of the space dedicated to the city’s veterans and that it’s the city’s obligation to clean up the area and deal with the problem.

There were calls for humane alternativ­es, which officials explained had been tried with little effect over the years, and objections that even killing the geese would be a temporary solution since the park offered an idyllic home that would continue to attract birds. Despite being migratory Canada geese, Department of Energy and Environmen­tal Protection migratory bird expert Min Huang said the geese are so comfortabl­e in the Bristol parks that they stay year round.

While one resident warned that children might become sick from putting the overabunda­nt goose feces in their mouths, another offered that she and other residents could pick it up for disposal while cleaning up after their dogs.

A fourth grader whose class wrote letters to the board on the subject suggested an alternativ­e habitat could be made instead of investing in killing the geese.

In total, Mayor Jeff Caggiano said officials had received 119 emails, 40 phone calls and other input from residents over the contentiou­s issue. He and Huang acknowledg­ed that Bristol and dozens of other towns across Connecticu­t have wrestled with the issue for decades.

“We have a situation here where you have more geese than some people are willing to tolerate,” Huang said. “By taking a drastic measure such as euthanasia, you make progress immediatel­y.”

Maintenanc­e to limit the population would then require other tactics such as destroying nests, hazing birds, addling eggs, not feeding the geese and making the location less appealing, he said.

The $3,365 cost to round up the geese would likely need to continue for a few years to have the desired effect, officials said.

In response to a DEEP survey, Huang said, 60% of Connecticu­t municipali­ties reported that geese were a problem but so far none has opted to round up and euthanize the geese as Bristol is considerin­g. New Britain, which has also had problems with geese overrunnin­g its parks, has been limiting the population there by killing small numbers of birds.

The population of geese in the state is just too high relative to what Huang called “social tolerance.”

He estimated the state has a year-round population of 27,000 birds, while the agency’s management goal is 15,000. The state does not engage in killing geese but supports municipali­ties in pursuing how to manage their population­s. Hunting, he said, is the most helpful tactic in more rural areas. Caggiano quipped that it would not be possible in Bristol.

Ultimately, the board decided to take no action and delayed the issue until its meeting next month, May 15 at 6 p.m.

 ?? HARTFORD COURANT AARON FLAUM/ ?? Canada geese wander around the pond and walkways at Veterans Memorial Boulevard Park in Bristol.
HARTFORD COURANT AARON FLAUM/ Canada geese wander around the pond and walkways at Veterans Memorial Boulevard Park in Bristol.
 ?? AARON FLAUM/HARTFORD COURANT ?? Canada geese wander around Veterans Memorial Boulevard Park in Bristol.
AARON FLAUM/HARTFORD COURANT Canada geese wander around Veterans Memorial Boulevard Park in Bristol.

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