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B.C. Environment Minister pledges action on rat poison use

North Van owl advocate lobbying for 'Lucky's law,' a provincial ban on sale and use of bleed-out rodenticides
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Lucky the owl, near death, while being rescued in North Vancouver in 2020.

B.C.鈥檚 Environment Minister says he will be taking some action to curb the use of rat poisons that have a nasty habit of indiscriminately killing other wildlife, although the commitment may not go far enough for North Vancouver advocates.

Yasmin Abidi launched a petition last year that racked up almost 19,000 signatures calling on the province for an outright ban on anticoagulant rodenticides.

Anticoagulants work by thinning the blood of whatever animal consumes them, causing them to slowly bleed out. But any predator or scavenger that eats a poisoned rodent will very likely die itself.

础产颈诲颈鈥檚 MLA, North Vancouver-Seymour NDP member Susie Chant, delivered the petition in the legislature on March 13 and Environment Minister George Heyman wrote directly to Abidi last week, pledging to 鈥渁ddress risks associated鈥 with rodenticides. His letter to Abidi references better education, stricter enforcement and possibly more stringent measures.

















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鈥淚 have asked ministry staff to develop options for improvements to how rodenticides are regulated in B.C., including consideration of bans,鈥 Heyman wrote.

Abidi said she was surprised to get a response so soon, although it is hardly a case of owls well that ends well, she added.

鈥淚t's not 100 per cent what I'm asking for, but it's the start of a conversation,鈥 she said. 鈥淭he fact is that owls are still dying and until we get rid of these substances completely, the problem is still going to exist.鈥

After lobbying from Abidi, all three North Shore councils passed but they do not have jurisdiction to ban their sale or use on private property.

Abidi said she understands there is a need for pest control and a lot of money at stake for the industry, but she said it is beyond time to for the law to require more humane tactics. There is research that rodent pests can be made infertile using non-toxic baits, she said. Snap traps can also be preferable. And newer on the market are CO2-powered traps designed to bean the noggin of any rat that pokes its head in, leaving a non-toxic meal for wild scavengers to feed on.

鈥淎ll they鈥檙e doing is trying to feed themselves, and it's really unfair,鈥 she said.

In 2020, Abidi had a hand in after he narrow survived rodenticide poisoning twice in one month. He was later and Abidi hopes she won鈥檛 run into him again.

鈥淚 hope to God he is halfway to Alaska or even in Alaska and he's got a mate and he's had his breeding season, probably has got some babes,鈥 she said. 鈥淚'm really hoping he's living his best life as far away from bait boxes as possible.鈥

Abidi, an actor by day, has also been working on a documentary about Lucky.

鈥淚t's all coming together,鈥 she said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 going to be an education piece and awareness piece and I want to be able to put it out there to the world because it's a worldwide issue.鈥

To raise money for the film, Abidi has been selling 鈥淟ucky鈥檚 Army鈥 buttons, which can be requested at luckytheowl@gmail.com.

Abidi said she is waiting to see what actions Heyman will take, but in the meantime, she still encourages more people to sign the  petition on change.org or write to 贬别测尘补苍鈥檚 office directly.

鈥淲e need that ban, and we needed it decades ago,鈥 she said.

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