By
cancelling
its Bear
Wise
program, the
Ministry of
Natural
Resources
has
essentially
downloaded
bear
relocation
to Sudbury,
leaving it
in the hands
of police
officers who
don't know
what to do
when one
comes
calling,
Police Chief
Frank Elsner
said.
Elsner was
at Tuesday's
city council
meeting to
support the
purchase of
a new radio
communications
system for
police, fire
and transit
services,
which was
approved by
council.
While Elsner
was at the
meeting,
Ward 3 Coun.
Claude
Berthiaume
asked about
the nuisance
bear problem
that has
been
plaguing
Sudbury.
"(Police)
are
responding
to about
five bear
calls a day,
but get many
more calls
than that,"
Elsner said,
adding
officers
respond to
the calls
only when a
situation is
"life-threatening."
So far,
Greater
Sudbury
Police have
had to
euthanize
one bear --
except they
don't have
training for
that either.
On May 1,
the Ministry
of Natural
Resources
scrapped its
trap and
relocate
program,
arguing that
the program
was
ineffective.
Now, it only
gives advice
on how to
scare bears
away and
make
residences
bear-proof.
Elsner did
not hear
about the
cancellation
from the MNR,
instead he
found out
about it
through the
media.
Since then,
there have
been a
number of
bear
sightings
throughout
Greater
Sudbury.
On Saturday,
a bear cub
almost
suffocated
after being
tied to a
cable ground
wire in
Garson.
Police are
searching
for the
person
responsible.
Also on
Saturday,
there were
reports of a
group of
kids in New
Sudbury
chasing and
taunting
another bear
cub.
"People are
going out
there,
harassing,
confronting
bears and
doing all
kinds of
ridiculous
things,"
said Elsner.
"It puts
people in
harm's way."
The program
cancellation
is a "poor
decision
from a
safety
perspective,"
said Elsner.
"Police
services are
already
taxed ...
it's really
starting to
affect us."