Nova Scotia

Nova Scotia nixes spring bear hunt pilot following public consultation

Nova Scotia will remain the only province in the country with a black bear population and no spring bear hunt.

Province says 51% of respondents in online survey were opposed to hunt

a black bear and two cubs approach a bait station.
The Nova Scotia government says it will not be moving forward with a proposed pilot for a spring bear hunt. (Sali Cunningham)

Nova Scotia will remain the only province in the country with a black bear population and no spring bear hunt.

The Department of Natural Resources and Renewables made the announcement in a news release on Wednesday. It comes after the department held public consultations, including an online survey, soliciting opinions on the issue.

Over 17,000 Nova Scotians responded to the survey, with 51 per cent opposed to the hunt and 47 per cent in favour, while two per cent were neutral.

Many of those who said they were opposed to the hunt cited concerns over bear conservation, potential safety issues, and the potential for conflict with other outdoor activities.

"The bear population is robust and there's a spring hunt in every other jurisdiction in the country, so I don't think that we expected to see quite the division that we saw," Andrew Boyne, DNR's director of wildlife, told CBC Radio's Information Morning Halifax.

"And we deemed that there was sufficient opposition to it that it wasn't the right time to move forward with that this spring."

The department had proposed a spring hunt pilot project starting May 20 and running five weeks until June 22, excluding Sundays.

The hunt would have followed similar regulations as the fall hunt, permitting only the killing of male bears and females with no cubs.

Hunters would still have been limited to one bear per year.

According to data from the province, the bear population in Nova Scotia is believed to be stable or increasing.

The province said in its release that it would be working with Acadia University on a research project to improve knowledge about black bears in the province.

We reconnect with Andrew Boyne, director of wildlife for the Department of Natural Resources and Renewables, to find out what kind of feedback they heard from Nova Scotians around a proposed first-ever spring bear hunt pilot – and why they ultimately decided to call it off.

Boyne said this year's decision does not negate a spring hunt happening in the future. 

"We're always reviewing our regulations and looking at ways to improve how we manage hunting in the province, but it's hard to say whether the environment will be appropriate in the future to explore this again," he said. "It's certainly possible."

Organizations weigh in

The department said it also received 134 emails from people and 10 letters from organizations. Most of the feedback was not in support of the hunt, it said.

The Nova Scotia Federation of Anglers and Hunters, the Big Game Society and the Safari Club were supportive of the hunt. The Ecology Action Centre, Nature Nova Scotia, Humane Society International Canada, Animal Alliance of Canada, Healthy Forest Coalition and the Municipality of Pictou County were opposed, it said.

The Tourism Industry Association of Nova Scotia (TIANS) did not express a view, the department said.

N.S. scraps idea for spring bear hunt

7 months ago
Duration 6:06
The province says it will not move forward with plans for a bear hunt this spring following public consultation. Sali Cunningham, president of the Nova Scotia chapter for Safari Club International, a hunting rights and wildlife conservation group, says she's "incredibly disappointed" by the decision. She spoke with CBC's Tom Murphy.

However, TIANS contacted CBC after the story was published and shared correspondence that had been sent to Department of Natural Resources and Renewable Minister Tory Rushton's office asking for the consultation period to be extended, "to allow for a better review and opportunity for input from sectors that will be impacted."

"What impact will a bear hunt at the beginning of Nova Scotia's lucrative tourism season have on the sector?  Without understanding all the nuances of this policy adjustment, we would suggest it could be a deterrent," wrote TIANS chair Wes Surrett. 

Sali Cunningham, president of the Nova Scotia chapter for Safari Club International, a hunting rights and wildlife conservation group, said she was "incredibly disappointed in the outcome of the survey." 

Cunningham said she believes the province gave greater weight to emotional concerns about the spring bear hunt than scientific ones, suggesting that if the pilot went ahead, it would have given the province the data it needed to make an informed decision. 

"When we're talking about conservation of species, we have to put that emotion aside and allow for just the facts of what the science tells us," Cunningham said.

With files from CBC News at 6, Portia Clark

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