//
you're reading...
Alternatives Journal, Environment, Ontario Politics

MNR lacks real-time data on controversial spring bear hunt

Black bear. (Flickr photo by Casey Brown)

Black bear. (Flickr photo by Casey Brown)

JUST OVER HALFWAY through the reintroduced six-week spring bear hunt, which runs from May 1 to June 15, the province of Ontario has issued close to 2,300 licenses for black bears.

Unfortunately, the Ministry of Natural Resources has no idea how many of those licences will be used this spring, and how many were requested for use in the fall.

Each license entitles an Ontario resident hunter to kill one black bear in 2014, but would-be hunters are not required to specify whether they intend to tag a bear in spring or during the fall hunt, which occurs between August 15 and November 30, depending on the location.

“Since bear hunting licences are valid for both the spring and fall seasons, we don’t know if these licence purchasers intend to hunt bear this spring or simply bought their licenses at the same time as other big game licences and intend to hunt bear in the fall,” said MNR spokeswoman Jolanta Kowalski.

The ministry will have a better idea how popular the controversial spring bear hunt was later this summer when the results of a questionnaire spring hunters are required to submit to the government is tallied and made public.

“Hunters have until August 1 to complete their questionnaire, and an assessment of participation and harvest levels will not be available until after that time,” she said.

Hunters are allowed to kill one black bear per season, but in some wildlife management units, bear populations are strong enough that a hunter may apply for a second license. The ministry has set out strict guidelines outlawing the killing of bears within half a kilometre of a garbage dump, any bear cubs or females accompanied by cubs.

The spring bear hunt was cancelled by Progressive Conservative Premier Mike Harris in 1999, but Liberal MNR minister David Orazietti announced in November 2013 the hunt would return as a six-week pilot project in 2014 and 2015. However, it would operate in just eight wildlife management units around Timmins, Sudbury, Thunder Bay, North Bay and Sault Ste. Marie.

Orazietti has long maintained the reintroduction of the spring hunt is about public safety, pure and simple.

Cochrane Mayor and PC candidate Peter Politis told The Agenda host Steve Paikin on April 25 that black bears in his part of northern Ontario “are getting braver and more aggressive” in their interactions with humans, occasionally wandering into people’s homes in search of food.

“We need a complete bear management program,” Politis said. “The spring hunt is not the answer, but it’s part of the answer.”

According to Orazietti, himself the long-serving MPP for Sault Ste. Marie, the latest version of the spring hunt is more “strategic” and “thoughtful” than it was 15 years ago.

“Our approach is not the reinstatement of the spring bear hunt of yesteryear,” Orazietti told me late last month before the provincial election was called.

“This is a more thoughtful, strategic approach in eight wildlife management units out of 95. So it’s not a blanket approach: it targets specific areas that have high human-bear conflicts.”

And in northern Ontario at least, the hunt has been popular.

Read the full article at Alternatives Journal.

About awreeves

Editor-in-chief at Alternatives Journal. Author of 'Overrun: Dispatches from the Asian carp Crisis'.

Discussion

No comments yet.

Leave a comment

Enter your email address to subscribe to reeves report and receive new posts in your inbox.

reeves report archives