Battle renewed over Canadian grizzly bear hunt

Copyright 2001 Reuters
July 19, 2001

VANCOUVER, British Columbia — The battle over grizzly bears in British Columbia has been rejoined, with environmentalists angry over this week's decision by the province's new government to lift a hunting moratorium.

At issue again is just how many of the massive animals are living in the western Canadian province's wilderness. Environmentalists maintain the animals are endangered, but hunters claim the bear population is doing just fine.

Green groups have condemned British Columbia's Liberal Party government for lifting the three-year moratorium enacted by the former New Democratic Party (NDP) government in February as it sought to woo environmental support before an election in this province.

"The decision to reopen the grizzly bear hunt in B.C. has been poorly thought out and rashly implemented ..." the Western Canadian Wilderness Committee said. "They have no idea how passionately people feel about saving these magnificent creatures."

Grizzly bears once ranged across western North America but are now found only in western Canada and a few of the northern states, including Alaska. British Columbia is home of a quarter of the bears, which can weigh 1,000 pounds and, on their hind legs, can stand 10 feet tall.

Opponents of hunting estimate that there are between 4,000 and 6,000 grizzly bears in the province, while provincial biologists put the number between 10,000 and 13,000. Some hunters believe it is even higher.

Faced with an international public relations campaign against the hunt, the NDP enacted a province-wide moratorium on hunting, which it said would allow wildlife experts to conduct an accurate count of the number of grizzlies.

The Liberals, who won the May election in a landslide, kept the moratorium in place in several areas where the bears are believed to be threatened but ended it in most of the province, while a newly appointed scientific panel drafts recommendations for a new hunting policy.

"The blanket moratorium on grizzly bear hunting was imposed by the previous government for political reasons and was inconsistent with the wildlife branch's own analysis," said Water, Land, and Air Protection Minister Joyce Murray when announcing the policy change.

Some pro-hunting groups have estimated that hunting trips, sold mostly to foreign tourists, contribute C$200 million (US$133 million) annually to the province's economy.

The exact number of bears killed last year is not known. More than 230 bears were killed legally, but some animals were also shot illegally by poachers.

The six-member panel appointed by the Liberals, which includes five wildlife experts from the United States, is scheduled to deliver its preliminary findings on the sustainability of a bear hunting season by early next year. Error: Unable to read footer file.