As long as I can remember, I
have been interested in animal welfare issues, so when the second item on the
consent agenda for the Planning and Environment Committee was listed as dealing
with Potential Adverse Impacts to Municipal Infrastructure, Private and/or
Public Lands and Ecological Conditions of the Water Resources System from
Beaver Activity, I took note.
I had thought the matter had
been dealt with the preceding month when the recommendations from the Animal Welfare
Advisory Committee, which had been building up for a while, were finally
brought to the attention of the Public Safety Committee and from there to
council.
The issue arose out of a
concern that a beaver lodge in the Stanton Pond west of Hyde Park Road was
interfering with the drainage infrastructure. It appears that the automatic reaction
of engineering staff has been to have the offending creatures trapped and killed or
possibly relocated. To this end they hire trappers to remove the beavers.
It’s a fairly typical
response to wildlife/human conflicts in urban settings. A few years ago, police
shot a bear that came too close to the city. While I was on council, there was
a major effort on the part of some councillors to cull the deer in the Byron
Bog. They beat a hasty retreat in the face of significant public opposition.
Instead, we requested that an actual professional study be done to determine
the deer numbers and their impact on the bog. The resulting report showed that
the numbers of deer in the bog was actually very low and in decline and major
damage to the bog came more from off leash dogs, humans and buckthorn than from
deer.
The deer study, however,
proved to be very helpful, as a model to understand other forms of
wildlife/human conflicts.
This was one of the tasks of
the Animal Welfare Advisory Committee (AWAC), to advise the council on how to
deal with conflicts of this nature.
AWAC takes its responsibilities seriously. Its
members are solidly committed to animal welfare, and they are not afraid to do the needed research to speak knowledgeably on the issues they
undertake. They read and bring in qualified guest speakers to make
presentations.
To that end, they entertained a presentation from
the city ecologist, Bonnie Bergsma, who invited them:
to participate in the development of a Wildlife Strategy relating to the City’s beaver management practices, including development of a risk management evaluation process for responding to conflicts between beavers and infrastructure, such as municipal drains, culverts and storm water facilities.
Also, when undertaking stream restoration projects where there are existing beaver lodges and dams, that the recommended solution should not be to trap, kill and remove the beavers and their habitat, but to undertake the restoration with the protection of the beaver’s habitat in mind.
The advisory committee responded by receiving the
report and noting that “the AWAC will work with Civic Administration to develop
recommendations for policies and best practices to handle wildlife specific to
the City’s beaver management practice.” That report was ultimately received by
the Public Safety Committee and council, neither of whom indicated that the
AWAC should cease and desist.
AWAC meets monthly, while the Public Safety
Committee, to which it reports, meets rather infrequently. Thus it was that
AWAC continued to study the issue, identifying non-lethal alternatives for dealing
with bad beaver behaviour, and eventually made recommendations for the Public
Safety Committee’s and the council’s consideration.
What AWAC recommended was that, in accordance with a
request from the Ontario Wildlife Coalition, council support a progressive,
nonlethal approach to beaver management and that staff be directed to stop
their current practices in this regard. The committee wanted an opportunity to
complete its report and offer concrete suggestions for dealing with the
problem. The Public Safety committee agreed and so recommended to council,
which on June 26, 2012 passed the following motion:
i) the
Municipal Council BE REQUESTED to support and implement a progressive and humane response program related to human-wildlife conflicts in the municipality; it being noted that this matter was identified in the Beaver
Wildlife Management Strategy, dated December 13, 2011 and relating to the Stanton Drain Remediation and Storm Water Management Facility Construction;
ii) Civic Administration BE DIRECTED to refrain from further action with
respect to any current beaver intervention, pending the development of the program noted in a) above; it being noted that AWAC is reviewing the environmental impact study and will submit an additional report with recommendations to Municipal Council regarding the resident beaver noted in the above-noted report; and,
iii) a representative from Stormwater Management BE INVITED to a future meeting of the AWAC to discuss strategies to discourage circumstances which foster human-wildlife conflicts.
So why, only a month later, did that same staff come
forward with a recommendation to carry on business as usual, to continue
trapping and killing of beavers and destroying their habitat if staff deemed
them to have an adverse impact on infrastructure?
Staff made the recommendation to the Planning and
Environment Committee without any word to AWAC. Was it a deliberate attempt to
circumvent the input of AWAC or was everyone so confused by the myriad of
changes in committee structure and reporting relationships over the last two
years that no one knows what he is doing?
Certainly, the members of the Planning and
Environment Committee seemed baffled. Chair Bud Pohill wondered why he had
received emails and phone calls from the public about killing and trapping
beavers. What was going on? Councillor Judy Bryant wondered if that was what
they had to do, to protect infrastructure? It seems that no one on the
committee remembered that they had voted on this very issue only a few short
weeks ago.
Nor did city engineer, John Braam, who had recommended
the strategy upon a submission by stormwater manager, Berta Kritchker, seem to
have a good grasp on what this was all about. He could only reply that they
would act in accordance with the provincial requirements. Polhill wanted to know what they were. Braam wouldn’t
say. He was not prepared to go into the specifics. Suffice it to say that they
would be in accordance with the requirements of the Ministry of Natural
Resources (MNR).
“We’re not experts,” he acknowledged, but they used “licensed trappers.” What these trappers did, he did not say, but “the MNR are the experts” and they were not just going forth “willy-nilly.”
But surely, although he did not write the report, he would have read background documents. He should have known that council had already taken a position on this. At the
very least, it should have been pointed out
that, since this was a contradiction of what had been passed the previous
month, it would require a reconsideration and two-thirds vote of council to get
this through.
As it was, Pohill was not comfortable with what he
was hearing, and requested a report back. Good for him.
But the question is still, what happened? And why had they not read the added communication from AWAC? And why, when members of AWAC were right there to clarify, were they not consulted?
My guess is that there have been so many changes in committees
and so many shuffles in staff, that people do not have a good grasp of their
portfolios. With respect to AWAC, they used to report to the Environment and
Transportation Committee, then the Community and Neighbourhoods Committee and
now the Public Safety Committee, all within a single term of office. They had
good relations with Environmental Programs director Jay Stanford, but now the
department that deals with animal welfare issues is the By-law Enforcement division
of the Building Department. So they will now have to generate a relationship
with manager Orest Katolyk and director George Kotsifas.
And it’s not just the advisory committee although
they, being volunteers, will find these constant changes disorienting; it’s
also the staff, constantly switching portfolios with limited time to prepare
for them. It’s embarrassing being required to defend proposals of which you
have limited knowledge and little background.
Then, to top it all off, the advisory committee is
expected to monitor all the reports and agendas for all the standing committees just in
case something it is working on get sent in a new direction. It’s an impossible
task.
As for the elected officials, what accounts for them
not knowing what they voted on and what position they took?
I can only assume that they too have their attention
pulled in so many directions, following so many new ideas and plans, that it’s
impossible to keep up. Let’s hope that when tonight they vote themselves a 71%
raise in their expense accounts and a 300% or more increase in administrative
support, they use some of those resources to keep a record of what they voted
on and why.
7 comments:
Hi Gina, I completely agree with AWAC that the beaver should not be killed but to leave them in place in a municipal drain as seems to be suggested by the City Ecologist, is just not practical. The build up of water behind these dams defeats the whole purpose of the drains in the first place, which from my understanding are supposed to be able to deal with 100 year flood situations. The beavers should be relocated but that leaves the question, where?
While the beaver's industrious nature is a source of wonder, they can also be quite destructive from a human perspective. There is a large pond on the Fanshawe Golf Course that two years ago was ringed with nice mature trees. Now most of the trees have been felled by beavers into the pond. There are literally dozens of dead trees lining the perimeter of the pond. You can call it natural but it looks like hell.
Hi. My name is Sara Rans and I’m part of the City’s Animal Welfare Advisory Committee. We’ve been researching the beaver issue since January. Here are the solutionsFor mature trees, put wire mesh around the bottom of the tree and then grow fast-growing trees nearby. These younger trees are preferred over the mature ones and the beaver can’t gnaw through wire mesh. Problem solved and you get to watch the beaver repair a damaged ecosystem.
For stormwater issues such as drainage and blockage there are cost-effective flow devices which solve the problem permanently and allow beaver to live in the urban environment (still repairing damaged ecosystems). Otherwise you are trapping by conibear trap which drowns and crushes the beaver to death and you are exploding the dams and lodge. New beaver will come to the area. If you live trap, you are legally bound to move the beaver no more than 1 kilometre away. They will swim back. If you only explode the dams and lodge, there will re-build and you will have storm blockage and flooding again. The only permanent non-lethal fix is wire mesh and flow devices. I think it’s worth the price (I was told a beaver deceiver cost around $200). I wonder how much it costs to trap and explode and then repeat? Cornwall is an excellent example of an Ontario city using flow devices successfully. The website www.martinezbeavers.org has information and research available for citizens, politicians, government officials, and engineers about the success of these flow devices across North America. Hope this helps!
To many cooks in the kitchen.
I'll bet this is how mincemeat pie got invented. Someone probably put nutmeg in the sausage.
I read with interest the comment "bad beaver behaviour." Of course the beaver aren't behaving badly, they are doing what beavers do. Trapping and relocating or trapping and euthanizing, which if the truth be told is the more likely of the two, is the real "bad behaviour" here. Trapping and relocating or euthanizing is a lame, lazy and ineffective solution. It seems to me that council and the members of the Planning and Environment Committee might want to consider the research already done for them by AWAC. The solutions they have presented are a win/win scenario and have been tested and already proven to work, not just in Ontario, AND are cost effective as well. Does it get any better than that? I agree with and endorse AWAC's recommendations. They have done their job. Council can do theirs by seriously considering AWAC's recommendations on this matter and consider matching the beavers "dam" resourcefulness. :-)
Brian C. Salt
Director of Wildlife Rehabilitation
Salthaven Wildlife Rehabilitation and Education Centre Inc.
Thanks, Sara, for sharing the info on the non-lethal methods of mitigating perceived conflicts between human need, municipal infrastructure, and wild animals such as beavers.
The fact that 'licensed' trappers are used makes it sound like beaver-killing is some kind of proper practice, but obtaining a license to trap, hunt and fish in Ontario is not such a difficult thing.
As well, the Ministry of Natural Resources does not seem to function as a protector of wild animals, or even of the ecology of our forests, rivers and natural environment. A major function of that ministry is to sell licenses to hunters, trappers and anglers, so there is no incentive for them to advise against the killing of animals, and we should not be surprised when their recommendations favour the killing of animals. It appears often that their approved practices do not reflect the current research and more modern understanding of the beneficial role of wild animals in our world.
Let's keep this in mind when we hear that only 'MNR approved practices' are being adhered to.
Beavers are creative and beneficial creatures and we can surely adopt the methods that have been shown to work well in other communities.
I heard recently that this debate continues. It is now too late to relocate the beavers as they would be bound to starve over the winter. Perhaps working the beavers - aren't they just trying to create storm water ponds.
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