Bear shot dead in Burlington

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It seems that we need bear defence in Burlington.

Wandering bear shot dead in Burlington


Nikki Wesley/Metroland...


Halton police shot and killed a black bear in Burlington’s Mountainside Park Wednesday morning.

The bear, which was believed to weigh about 300 pounds, was spotted earlier by two residents in the area at about 10 a.m., was moving “in a westerly direction and headed right into a residential area” when it was shot, Sgt. Dave Cross said.

“Unfortunately, there were no other alternatives available to us at that time. So, given the public safety issue the bear presented, it had to be killed.”

Halton police and Burlington animal control officials, who were also on scene, do not have tranquilizing capability, Cross said. He noted that police contacted the Ministry of Natural Resources (MNR) after they received reports of the sightings, but no one from the MNR was able to attend at the time.

Police say officers fired four shots at the animal. The bear’s body is now with animal control, which will take measurements of the animal.

Director of planning and building Bruce Krushelnicki said they plan to release the carcass to a Six Nations group that contacted the city. The Six Nations group wants to perform a ritual for the bear, he said.

Students at Mountainside area schools were not allowed outside for recess or other activities as police hunted for the bear.

Wednesday bear shooting marks a week of bear sightings in Halton.

A black bear was spotted in Milton in the area of Guelph Line and Highway 401 in Milton Saturday. There was another sighting of a bear on a farmer’s property in the area of Sixth Line and Lower Base Road in Milton on Sunday.

Cross said police could not determine whether the bear killed Wednesday is the same animal.

The police’s special tactical unit had fanned out across the park in search of the bear after two residents reported separate sightings about 10 a.m.

The Halton public school board had two elementary schools in a “hold and secure” status – Rolling Meadows, a JK to Grade 8 school on Mountain Grove Ave. with 590 students; and Clarksdale, a JK to Grade 6 school on Mountainside Drive with 825 students.

Public school spokesperson Marnie Denton said high school M.M. Robinson was not affected.


View Halton Bear Sightings in a larger map

http://www.thespec.com/news/local/article/725558--wandering-bear-shot-dead-in-burlington
 
If we had a spring bear hunt, there would be a lot less of this.
But seeing as we don't, I expect the bears will get further and further into the city.

As yourself McGuinty, how many bears were in Burlington before the spring hunt ended?
 
Why not use a tranquilizer gun instead of killing the animal ??
see article
article said:
Halton police and Burlington animal control officials, who were also on scene, do not have tranquilizing capability, Cross said. He noted that police contacted the Ministry of Natural Resources (MNR) after they received reports of the sightings, but no one from the MNR was able to attend at the time.
 
If we had a spring bear hunt, there would be a lot less of this.
But seeing as we don't, I expect the bears will get further and further into the city.

As yourself McGuinty, how many bears were in Burlington before the spring hunt ended?

I hope people in the south see more and more bears every year. We have a huge problem in northern ontario with the bear population but since there arn't that many of us up here, what we say doesn't really get heard in queens park. (that and we keep voting in NDP douches) Maybe with more and more sightings in the south, your average liberal might start to understand that yogi isn't so damn cute and cuddly and that we should start killing these things in the spring again.

We try to keep our bears in check but there is only so much we can do. Last year i helped kill 8 of them on my uncles farm alone. (800 acres-ish) Not to mention the farmers who were digging mass graves for the 10-25 bears per 750 acre farm that they had to kill. This sh*t happens. Every year.
 
cbc report, video incl. Its getting BIGGER!!!!!!!!

http://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/toronto/story/2012/05/16/toronto0bear-shot-burlington.html
A black bear spotted in a small wooded area near several Burlington, Ont., homes was shot dead Wednesday by Halton police officers.

Residents reported the bear in Mount Forest Park around 10 a.m. and police contacted the Ministry of Natural Resources for help.
But Halton regional police Sgt. Dave Cross said the police service couldn't get the assistance it needed, and was not equipped to handle the situation without putting the animal down.

"We do not have tranquilizer guns or that capability, nor are we trained to utilize them," Cross said.

"Our officers do not relish having to dispatch an animal, but our options were extremely limited," he added in a statement.

Bear weighed up to 400 pounds
City of Burlington Animal Control were also not equipped to safely resolve the situation, though they were contacted.

The bear was an adult male weighing up to 400 pounds, and had at one point ventured only nine metres away from one residence.

“[Ministry of Natural Resources] personnel advised police that in order to immobilize a bear to relocate it, it needs to be contained up a tree and not in a densely populated residential area,” Cross explained in a press release.

“MNR officials said it can take up to 15 to 20 minutes for immobilization to take effect, and the bear can be actively on the move and still pose a threat during this time which is why this method is not suitable for residential areas."

At least four shots were fired.

One women who heard the gunshots said she was sad the animal had to be killed.

"I'm glad that I wasn't walking in there with my 22-month-old or my five-and-a-half-year-old," she said.

Michael Gravelle, the minister of natural resources, said this week the ministry would no longer tranquilize and relocate rogue bears, arguing that the practice wasn't working and bears continued to return to the same areas.

There were three separate sightings of a black bear in Milton, Ont., this week.
 
Bring em on down to Southern Ontario, I would gladly have em down here since I can't head north to hunt them yet!
 
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