• Willowbrae-Academy-SquamishMAY2025-scaled.jpg
  • Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar
  • Skip to footer
  • About Us
  • Advertise
  • Send Story Ideas & Tips
  • Contact
  • News Alerts
The Squamish Reporter

The Squamish Reporter

Follow us

Local News from Squamish and Sea to Sky Region

Thursday May 8, 2025 Your gateway to the Sea to Sky corridor
  • Home
  • Squamish
  • Sea to Sky
  • BC/Canada
  • Life
  • Support Us
  • Angie-and-Carlos-.jpg
  • Cleveland-1.jpg
  • OSSA-.png

Wildlife group issues plea to save bear family in downtown Squamish

June 6, 2018 2:16pm

A Wildlife Working Group consisting of WildsafeBC, Conservation Officer Service, Squamish Nation, RCMP, Green For Life – Squamish Division and District of Squamish are urging people to lock their totes to save a bear family living near downtown Squamish.

The group is very concerned about a bear family living near downtown. A mother and her cubs have been able to access garbage in the downtown area and are now on a path that may lead to their destruction.

The long-term outcome for bears feeding on garbage is a sad one, and one that everyone involved works hard to prevent.

Their dependence on non-natural food sources ultimately puts them on a path from which they cannot recover, the group said, noting that for bears reliant upon eating garbage, relocation and rehabilitation doesn’t work.

The Wildlife Working Group is putting out a plea to all residents, visitors and businesses, especially those in the downtown area, to ensure bears, and especially this bear family, cannot access garbage.

If bears are able to access garbage, their chance of long-term survival goes downhill.

Please ensure totes and bins are locked and stored inside a garage or shed wherever possible. If your tote is damaged and can no longer be locked, please contact Green For Life – Squamish Division at 604.892.5604.

If you spot unsecured garbage, please report it to Bylaw Officers at 604.815.5067 or the RAPP line at 1.877.952.7277 (#7277 on your cell phone) so steps can be taken to address the problem.

Share

Share

[addtoany]

16-year-old dead after hiking accident in Lions Bay

Bailey Street encampment: District says it’s ‘limited’ in response

Squamish Splash Park delayed for two years

https://www.squamishreporter.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/10/Nesters-Sean-Jordan.jpg

Reader Interactions

Comments

  1. Daniele Halle says

    June 6, 2018 at 2:31 pm

    I am so tired of hearing wild animals being killed because they are near a town and people are scared that the animals will be a danger to human life, well, think about it, we, humans are in there territory, we are infringing on there life, so stop this nonsense and help them instead of killing them

  2. Anne Bright says

    June 9, 2018 at 9:21 am

    Not to mention all us volunteers with these groups out there trying to educate the ignorant and working with councils and DOS to make it a fineable offence to store organic and garbage outdoors period. Neighbourhoods built next to the Estuary – totes in garages period and not “if possible” and DOS needs to enforce this. It’s already proven the locks don’t work.

Primary Sidebar

  • local-roots.png

Footer

  • About Us
  • Advertise
  • Privacy
  • Terms & Conditions
Top Copyright ©2020 The Squamish Reporter. All Rights Reserved squamish reporter logo