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coexisting with wildlife / January 10, 2023

CRD Goose Management Strategy and Cull Irresponsible

CRD Goose Cull

You only need to fill out and send the Elector Response Form below to vote in opposition to the cull.

CRD residents can fill out the Elector Response Form here:

The CRD has made the process of finding and submitting the form very convoluted for those without a digital signature or a scanner. We do have confirmation from them that if you can print the form and sign it, then take a picture of it and e-mail it to them, they will accept it.


The Capital Regional District (CRD), made up of 13 member municipalities from southern Vancouver Island and the Gulf Islands, is proposing a Canada Goose Management Strategy, which will include a cull, despite not having done their due diligence on non-lethal methods of habitat modification. Animal Alliance of Canada is advising against a cull as they will not resolve conflict, population issues, and are inhumane.

In its 2022 Canada Goose Mitigation Draft Action Plan, prepared by Guardian of the Mid-Island Estuary Society for the CRD, they state, “The CRD developed a Canada Goose Management Strategy in 2012 but has not actively worked to implement key mitigation activities in recent years.” Clearly, they have not done their due diligence at this point to justify a cull.

The Animal Alliance of Canada (AAC) has opposed Canada goose culls in Parksville, Vernon and other parts of the country because a body of evidence shows that non-lethal alternatives work better. Culls are inhumane and ineffective at addressing concerns about geese.  

AAC campaigner Jordan Reichert explains that this is because culls tend to have a reverse effect on populations, causing them to increase, as more resources are available to survivors, natural mortality decreases and other birds move into the region. Too often culling targets breeding birds, not the visiting “moult migrants” who contribute to most of the concerns, while failing to address the causes for those concerns.

“The CRD has provided very little background information that would allow the public to understand this issue better and neglected their due diligence of fully exploring habitat modification as an evidence-based alternative to short-sighted culling.”

Canada geese are “grazers” who eat the tops off growing grass but require access to open water. AAC’s 60 page manual, which was sent to the CRD, shows how, based on actual successes, relatively simple modifications of habitat, such as planting shrubs and tall grasses to block sightlines between lawns and water, along with egg-addling, enforced feeding bans, overhead lines on farms, and other non-lethal control methods, can produce long-lasting results without resorting to perpetual killing.

Barry Kent MacKay, Animal Alliance Director and bird expert, says “There are many examples of municipalities and regions in Canada that had similar problems and resolved them with creative, non-lethal habitat modification techniques. Creating a solution for the CRD is certainly feasible, if the board is willing.”

There is also the ethical concern of the killing of geese in the cull. In 2016, Parksville killed 484 moulting geese after they were rounded up into tennis courts and shot with bolt guns, which are not listed as an approved method of killing geese by the Canadian Wildlife Service. 

The CRD has only said that the meat will not be wasted in reference to the cull, but this has nothing to do with addressing concerns of inhumane treatment and animal suffering.

“Geese mate for life and may mourn the loss of their partner,” explained Reichert. “Killing large numbers of geese is not just a matter of bureaucratic management. These individuals have families and their physical and psychological suffering must be taken seriously.”

The Animal Alliance is encouraging the public to respond to the alternative approval process by Jan, 23rd to send the CRD back to properly implement habitat modification in its strategy, in place of culling.

CRD residents can fill out the Elector Response Form here:

For further information or comment, please contact

Jordan Reichert
jordan@animalalliance.ca or 250-216-0562
Animal Alliance of Canada

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Filed Under: coexisting with wildlife

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Reader Interactions

Comments

  1. Maya Vergani says

    January 13, 2023 at 10:10 pm

    There is no wildlife left .
    Barely any squirrels, no raccoons , no skunks!
    It’s beautiful to see the geese !
    What’s next !?
    Please 🙏 don’t Cull them !

    Reply
  2. Angela says

    January 14, 2023 at 3:25 pm

    This is not okay. We overpopulated the earth then say there’s no room for the animals and kill them off? Maybe we should think of a smarter way to deal with it

    Reply
  3. Ann says

    January 16, 2023 at 6:36 pm

    Thank you for speaking up. Much admiration for all your wonderful work. Culling is both ineffective and inhumane. There is no evidence-based justification. Long term results demonstrate this.

    Wish the CRD would do adequate scientific research before engaging in these pseudo-quick fix processes that only translate as mere PR puffery for impatient and uninformed stakeholders.

    Reply
  4. Dawn Ullock says

    January 16, 2023 at 10:40 pm

    Man always has to intervene, control the animal population. “Look as to how many we have lost, now extinct because of it!” No culling!

    Reply
  5. Pip van Nispen says

    January 18, 2023 at 11:12 am

    Please do not cull the geese…there is absolutely no reason for this other than the inability of humans to share scarce resources ie parks with other species. Disgusting!

    Reply
  6. S clarke says

    January 19, 2023 at 1:13 am

    Let nature take care of itself.
    Humans have screwed everything up in nature.
    Don’t cull please

    Reply
  7. Juanita Czervenatis says

    January 19, 2023 at 11:52 am

    It’s just so sad 😭 what’s next!!!

    Reply
  8. Cheryle-Ann E Brooks says

    January 19, 2023 at 6:48 pm

    This not right for any reason (excuse).

    Reply
  9. Renee Sennette says

    January 20, 2023 at 12:57 am

    Why must as humans think we have to kill the animemos where are the ones taking over the land leaving them little space to live hunt eat. There has to be better solutions

    Reply
  10. Elizabeth Lubenow says

    January 20, 2023 at 9:20 am

    No Killing! Stay away from Nature! Every time man intervenes we have great losses. Every species depends on another species to survive. Quit interfering. When will man learn!

    Reply

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