Thursday, 9 February 2012

NOW IT BEGINS

Traps arrive for Invermere urban deer cull

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Invermere's cull of up to 100 urban deer could be underway by the weekend, mayor Gerry Taft confirmed today.
Clover traps for the project have arrived in town from Kimberley, where a cull of 101 mule deer wrapped up last week, and Taft says contractor Larry Mullikin has already received training on the bolt guns which will be used to put down the animals.
"It should be set to begin in the next couple of days," Taft told The Echo Thursday.
District councillors will likely head out to witness the culling process some time next week.
Council agreed to observe the deer-killing process back in January, when it approved Mullikin's contract and budgeted up to $35,000 for the cull. At the time they also added a cancellation clause to the agreement. Should the majority of council feel the process used to put down the deer is "inhumane," the cull can be stopped outright.
"They want to check and make sure that that actual traps are functioning, so I'm just speculating at this point. But it's probably early to middle of next week it'll be up and running and council will be invited to go out if they want to," Taft said.
The cull will take place at night, focussing on the core of the district where "the most habituated deer" reside, Taft said.
"There's been quite an extensive list of residents who've volunteered their property and their yards as locations for traps, and the contractor has checked those locations out and found a lot of them to be acceptable and hopefully not super visible to the public," he added.
"The intention is to be very sensitive of the fact that there are some people who don't want this to happen, and some people who, although they understand the need for it, don't want to see it."
While Cranbrook's cull of 25 deer late last year appears to have gone smoothly, Kimberley's cull was punctuated by some vandalism.
In January, the Kimberley Daily Bulletin reported some of the clover traps set up in the community had been triggered before they could trap an animal and at least one was "damaged beyond repair," according to city councillor Darryl Oakley.
Taft said the district will be working with the RCMP to try to minimize the chance of that happening here, but said vandalism is "a concern."
"I'm not sure, with a few of the individuals who are very opposed to this, how extreme their opposition might be and what level they're willing to go to," he said.

1 comment:

  1. "Out of sight and out of mind" - perhaps the town council thinks by hiding it - people will not notice that it is going on or that it will be forgotten. The culls went "smoothly" in Cranbrook and Kimberley because the town councils with their "conflict of interest" deer committees blindsighted the community by secretly doing these culls before anyone even realized it was happening. However, now the world will know exactly what you are doing.

    How kind of My Mayor of Invermere to be so sensitive to those few individuals who might possibly vandalize his traps like criminals - have you seen who those people are - just your average compassionate people who might even live next door to you but they know what you are doing is wrong wrong and wrong. Also don't discount the rest of Canada and the world - 748 people have read this blog in 3 days and thousands more have signed the petitions. There is a lot of opposition and there will be a lot more to come. This is an issue that will not go away quietly - you might think your propaganda that you are putting out there will keep everyone quiet but don't worry the truth will shine through.

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