Inside the secret plan to relocate a wayward B.C. grizzly bear
In fact, despite the province's repeated claims that the bear had already been moved twice and thus wasn't a good candidate for relocation, a secret plan to transport him to a remote location was in place.
"We had a very well thought-out plan and everybody on standby," said Erik Blaney, the shíshálh Nation's acting manager of lands and resources.
"He would have been living his best life up there."
That plan was laid to rest when conservation officers investigated a report that the grizzly had been shot and wounded, and then discovered its carcass earlier this week.
Some local residents were shocked to find out about the relocation plan, given conservation officers' previous claims it would be impossible. Others think the bear could still be alive if they had been given information about the plan.
But Blaney says social media and the misinformation that often comes with it made that impossible.
Blaney, a legislator with the Tla'amin Nation, says the plan that he had hatched nearly three weeks ago was eventually approved by the province, with some minor changes.
Details were kept under wraps and only shared with a handful of people. Some Texada Island residents — many of whom had asked for weeks for the bear to be relocated — are wondering why they weren't made aware of it.
"It's unfortunate that the community wasn't [informed]," said Texada Island resident Daniel Cammiade.
"[If we had] I think that it's quite possible that the bear would still be alive."
Calls for relocation
The five-year-old male grizzly was first spotted on Texada Island on May 25. Texada residents say the island is a predator-free community, and many were worried about the bear's presence.
While some called for peaceful coexistence with the bear, many others wanted it relocated for its safety and their own.
"It seems like things were left in the community's hands — a community that was not used to dealing with bears," Cammiade said.
The B.C. Conservation Officer Service repeatedly told CBC News the bear wasn't a good candidate for relocation because it had already been relocated twice, but also said there was no "kill order" for the animal.
Solution hatched
By the end of June, Blaney's plan had been hatched.
Working with the shíshálh, Homalco and Tla'amin nations, he wanted to trap the bear and move it to Bute Inlet, on Homalco territory, where it could live with other coastal grizzlies and be far enough away that it couldn't swim back.
"I've worked up there for many years now and it's a pretty hard trek to get into town," Blaney told CBC News.
"And there's plentiful salmon runs where we were going to drop them off and a really good pink salmon run expected this year."
But the province didn't sign off on that plan.
Blaney said the province told him that what they were asking was outside current policy — and that to capture and move the bear without a permit could lead to charges under the Wildlife Act.
Change of plans
Without informing the public, the province changed its mind.
Speaking with CBC's On the Island guest host Kathryn Marlow Wednesday morning, Minister of Water, Land and Resource Stewardship Randene Neill confirmed that the plan was approved almost two weeks ago.
"We had a meeting with the local nation there, the Homalco Nation, in partnership with the shíshálh Nation as well, who came up with a really robust, clear plan about how they wanted to translocate it in partnership with the Grizzly Bear Foundation," said Neill, who is also the MLA for Powell River-Sunshine Coast.
"After talking to all of our specialists and our team, we agreed to try this translocation."
Blaney says the nations worked with provincial officials to remind them that the shíshálh and Tla'amin nations are self-governing, and the province had an obligation to work with them to manage their wildlife resources.
"They can't just do the old paternalistic land and resource management around us or without us. Those decisions actually need to be made by the self-governing nations," he said.
Kept a secret
The exact plan was kept secret, Blaney says, in order not to compromise any of the details.
Blaney didn't want people hindering relocation efforts by posting about the trap's location on social media.
Texada Island residents had created a Facebook group to post information about the bear, including its location.
He says getting the right trap to Texada Island had already been delayed because of a claim on social media that the bear had been shot last week.
That led officers to reroute the trap to Pemberton to relocate a bear in that area, Blaney says, and it took days to move the animal and get the trap back to Texada.
Blaney says the trap was ready to go Tuesday morning, the day conservation officers announced the bear had been shot. Later that morning, the grizzly was found dead.
"We had six staff ready for deployment and the plan in place, helicopter on standby," he said.
It was too late.
The bear's death is still under investigation.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


New York Times
3 hours ago
- New York Times
A Fish Falls From the Sky and Sparks a Brush Fire in British Columbia
A small brush fire and power outage in British Columbia started on Wednesday not with lightning or a careless camper, but with an airborne fish, according to fire officials. With the help from nearby ranchers and employees from the British Columbia Hydro and Power Authority, a Canadian electric utility company, firefighters were able to contain and extinguish the blaze, Ashcroft Fire Rescue said on Facebook. Then came the investigation. It wasn't faulty equipment, according to fire officials. It was a fish. The authorities believe an osprey flying overhead dropped its catch midflight. The fish struck power lines, producing sparks that landed on dry grass and ignited the blaze, which took up less than an acre. The closest river, the likely place where the osprey caught its prey, is about two miles from the fire scene. It's unclear why the bird let go of the fish, the authorities said, but there is at least one theory. Ashcroft Fire Rescue wrote that it suspected that the size of the fish, combined with the heat that day, 'probably caused the rather tired bird to drop its catch.' The other possibility? 'It's tired of raw fish and wanted to give cooked a try,' it said. Electricity was temporarily knocked out in Ashcroft, a village of more than 1,500 people that is about 210 miles northeast of Vancouver. As for the osprey, firefighters reported that 'our prime suspect sustained no injuries in the incident and is still flying at large.' The fish, charred and probably overcooked, was not so lucky.
Yahoo
9 hours ago
- Yahoo
Historian wants to return WWII medals to family of N.B. veteran George Mann
A Saskatchewan author and historian wants to return a set of Second World War medals to a New Brunswick veteran's family. John Brady McDonald said the medals belonged to George Mann, who was born in Liverpool, England, in 1905 and moved to Canada after the war. Mann served in the Royal Fleet Auxiliary, which McDonald said was "kind of like the supply chain aspect of the Royal Navy." Mann immigrated to Canada after the war and then married Alice Margaret in Saint John. McDonald's research doesn't say exactly where Mann resided but that he lived in New Brunswick. McDonald has been searching for Mann's relatives since April. He said Mann received the 1939-1945 Star, the Atlantic Star for specific service in the Atlantic Ocean, and the Africa Star for being a part of the campaign in Africa. McDonald said duty in the Atlantic Ocean meant "dodging German submarines and German aircraft trying to take out the convoys that were feeding Britain at the time." Returning veterans' possessions is a project McDonald began in 2022 as a way of honouring military veterans. "That's my way of saying thank you to these veterans and it's something that's very important to me to be able to ensure that our history is not forgotten any more than it already has been," said McDonald, who even covers the cost of framing and shipping the medals. He has returned six sets of medals, a veteran's headstone and a family ration book. But to date, he has never returned anything to family in Atlantic Canada. McDonald got the idea of returning veterans' memorabilia when he learned more about his late grandfather's service. He wants to give families that same experience. "So many times when I've returned medals, not only did they not know that their grandfather served in the Second World War, they don't know what he did." McDonald is a civilian instructor with the Royal Canadian Sea Cadet Corps and he wants to ensure the stories of sacrifices made by veterans are shared. "We need to understand those ancestors of ours, those grandfathers, those great uncles, those fathers who stood up to fascism, who stood up to oppression, who stood up to the ultimate hatred that we had in the world at the time." He is also concerned about medals being sold as antiques in pawn shops or estate sales. "I wanted to make sure that, you know, our veterans' sacrifices weren't in vain," he said. McDonald said the majority of the medals he receives are sent to him by people who stumble across them. The process of finding relatives can be as quick as days or more than a year. He starts with a name and uses online searches and social media to try and track people down. A lot of his "cold" calls go unanswered, which he understands. But when there is an answer, McDonald said relatives have "immense gratitude and appreciation" for his work. He said if anyone has any information about George Mann, they should reach out to him on Facebook or email him at johnbradymcdonald@


New York Times
9 hours ago
- New York Times
Saving Hawaii's History From the Ashes, One Object at a Time
On a crystalline morning, with humpback whales leaping in the indigo waters offshore, a group of archivists, curators, conservators and volunteers gathered in a makeshift field station at the Lahaina Jodo Mission, a once-magnificent Japanese Buddhist temple compound that was largely obliterated in the wildfires of Aug. 8, 2023. They were there to take on a 'CSI'-like challenge: identifying, cleaning and cataloging the surprising array of artifacts that survived the fires, some nearly unrecognizable beneath flaking metal, scorch marks, ashes and soot. Theirs was a daunting and humbling task. On Sundays, Nancy Fushikoshi, one of the volunteers, used to come to the mission with her grandchildren to visit the three-tiered pagoda holding the cremated remains of her husband, Lane, who died 24 years ago. She would slide open the niche's doors so the grandkids could say 'Hi, Grandpa!' before lighting a stick of Japanese incense and saying a prayer. On the day wind-whipped embers turned the mission's coconut palms into torches, the Rev. Gensho Hara and his family attempted to stave off the flames with garden hoses, trying desperately to save the main temple and the pagoda, with its hand-laid copper shingled roof. The only structure to emerge unscathed was a monumental statue of the Buddha; at 12 feet tall, it was the largest such statue outside Japan. He sat serenely on his stone pedestal through it all, bronze hands folded on his lap. The pagoda's wooden shelves had collapsed in the inferno, sending the 187 metal urns housed there careening to the ground. The Fushikoshis were among the families volunteering on that recent morning, hoping that somehow curators and conservators would be able to discern the shallow engravings in Japanese of loved ones' names all but lost in charred and mottled metal. The wildfire of Aug. 8 claimed the lives of over 100 people, including five members of Hara's congregation. It displaced thousands and destroyed or damaged much of the town's historic core, with rebuilding estimated at $5.5 billion. The tragedy has resulted in increased rates of poverty, higher unemployment and skyrocketing housing costs. Want all of The Times? Subscribe.