After years of complaints, neighbours vent frustration over ramshackle city farm - Action News
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Manitoba

After years of complaints, neighbours vent frustration over ramshackle city farm

The owner of a small urban farm near the outskirts of Winnipeg is facing animal welfare complaints, the latest in a years-long saga over the state of his property that has neighbours frustrated but afraid to take their concerns public.

Provincial vet's office finds animals OK, City of Winnipeg could take over land if outstanding taxes go unpaid

Drago (Carl) Kucas says his livestock, and the many stray cats that come and go on his property, are well cared for, despite animal welfare complaints being investigated by Manitoba's provincial veterinarian office. (Bryce Hoye/CBC)

The owner of a small urban farm near the outskirts of Winnipeg is facing animal welfare complaints, the latest in a years-long saga over the state of his property that has neighbours frustrated but afraid to take their concernspublic.

DragoKucas, the owner of thesix-hectare pig and cattle farm on St. Mary's Road, who also uses the name Carl, says his animals and the stray cats he feeds are well cared for and live good lives, despite a recently launched animal welfare inspection.

"They should be more concerned about their own children, what they do, because those animals which are here, they have a better life than I do," saidKucas, whowas seen on Monday confronting someone tryingto feed cats at the edge of his property and who has a history of butting heads with the city."I have a respect for them [the animals] very much."

Cats crawl under, over and around a truck parked in Kucas's driveway. Massive holes are visible in the roof of a home in the background where he says he lives. (Walther Bernal/CBC)

A spokesperson with Manitoba'soffice of the provincial veterinariansays it has beenlooking intoanimal welfare complaints.

AreaCoun. BrianMayes(St. Vital) said he recently received a letter highlighting the concerns and he's aware of past complaints about the property. He said he is glad the provincial vet's office is on the caseand confirmed city staff are now in talks with the provinceabout next steps.

Not fit for animals: complaint

One such complaintalleges as many as 10 cats live on the property and are in need of medical attention, including one with a broken leg seen in June.

"The property is an environmental hazard, a disaster area, and certainly no place for animal or human to be residing," reads a letter of complaint dated June 30 sent to government officials.

Urban farmer argues cows, stray cats well cared for, despite animal welfare complaints

6 years ago
Duration 3:01
An animal protection officer and veterinarian found pigs, cattle and feral cats on Carl Drago Kucas's property are all in good health, but neighbours still say the St. Vital farm is an eyesore and has been a problem for years.

But according to an inspection report authored by veterinarian Ken Johnson, Kucas's animals appear to be doing fine.

Dr. Johnson said he was acting as an animal protection officer on behalf of the provincial vet's office on July 3 when he visited the farm and found the pigs and cattle were all in "good condition."

"The animals are in good shape, including the cats," he said."None of them are starving."

Prior complaints

Kucas, who says he was born in Croatia but has owned the St. Mary's Road farm for about 45 years, has drawn the ire of neighbours and landed before city council in the past.

The city would not confirm how many complaints have been made about the property over the years, but a spokesperson confirmed the lot is classifiedas rural-residential land.

Cattle surround one of several old vehicles parked on Kucas's six-hectare farm. (Bryce Hoye/CBC)

Therural designation normally allows landowners to grow plantsbut not keep livestock, thespokesperson said.

But Kucas has retained rights to keep livestock on his propertysince he bought the land in the 1970s, a city spokesperson confirmed in November of 2018.

History of conflict

Kucassaid he lives in a home on the property, despitegiant holes in the roof.

Several neighbourstoldCBCNews the fresh complaints are just the latest chapter in the issues with the state of his farm, which gives off a foul smell.

Kucas ran a failed 1989 campaign for councillor in the now-defunct Seine Valley ward,campaigning for greater transparency and accountability at city hall.

In 2010,the city ordered him to remove 20 derelictvehicles, a "dismantled tractor," a bathtub and a hot water tank, mattresses, scrap metal, tires, manure, old appliances and other "miscellaneous garbage" from his property.Hisappeal was denied.

Watch this tour of the property in2010:

CBC Archives: Farmer ordered to clean cluttered yard (2010)

6 years ago
Duration 1:43
People who live near Drago Kucas whose property in south St. Vital was littered with derelict automobiles, machinery and other debris at the time told a city committee in 2010 they can't stand the foul odour and rodents.

The issue stemmed from an "ongoing neighbour dispute" that drew police officers to the property in 2009, said WinnipegConst. TammySkrabek. In addition to police, at least five government agencies were involved in that case, including the provincial vetand the city's health, environmental, animal services and bylaw departments, she said.

Kucas said he has lived off very little income for years about $10,000 annually and kept the vehicles for parts.

Though many of those items are no longer visible from St. Mary's Road, cattle were seen gathered around a van in the field and a makeshift fence has been built using hay bales, garbage bins and plywood.

Kucas says he built the fence on the left to keep people from coming into his yard at night and taking stray cats. (Walther Bernal/CBC)

Some neighbours say cattle have wandered through holes in the fence and into their yards, while others called the farman eyesore. Other than one neighbour who had no issues withKucas, no neighboursagreed to speak on the record, citing safety concerns.

'Grave concern' about animals

A woman named Lauriesays battles over Kucas'sanimals have been ongoing for at least the two decades she has lived nearby.

She flagged environmental and animal welfare concerns inletters to the provincial vet, Mayes and other officialsafter finding a cat with a broken leg nearKucas's yard in June.

Watch Laurie feed the strays:

'We have a grave concern' over livestock and stray animals, local woman says of Winnipeg farm

6 years ago
Duration 0:50
Laurie says it's been a battle to get the owner of a farm on St. Mary's Road to clean up his yard. She filed a complaint about the welfare of animals, including stray cats, she says aren't well cared for. Meanwhile the farm owner, Carl Drago Kucas, says he loves his animals and they are well cared for.

"They are not cared for, they are not looked after, ever, in the 20 years that we've been here, and having them removed or looked after has always been a huge difficult situation, which I don't understand,"

"We have a grave concernabout this property and the animals that are kept here,"Laurie said, standing across from the St. Mary's Road property on Monday night.

She says some of the cats appear to be malnourished or in need of veterinary help, and she has since contacted at least eight local rescues for help.

But ofthe 10 or so cats Dr. Johnson says hesaw on July 3, none appearedinjured and all seemed healthy. That wasn't the first time he's been called toKucas'sland.

"It's not the prettiest looking pristine piece of property, but at the same time I've never seen any animals injured," he said.

Laurie said she recently took one of the cats to a vet and phoned in a report to the city. She'sbeen returning and placing dishes of cat food and water off-property only to return and find them destroyed.

Kucasshouted down another woman Monday afternoon who showed up during an interview with CBC News and left a short time later. Before she left, she said she heard through a Facebook group there were stray cats in the area and she was there to feed them.

WatchKucasconfront a woman who came tofeed the stray cats:

Farm owner confronts woman who came to feed stray cats

6 years ago
Duration 0:53
Carl Drago Kucas confronts a woman who shows up to his St. Mary's Road property to feed stray cats that live on his property. Kucas says though the cats aren't technically his, he does feed them and they keep rats and pests from his pigs and cattle.

Laurie said she was "chased down by the farm owner" Monday night when she went back to feed the cats.

"He tried to cut us off from proceeding down the road," said Laurie.CBCNews has agreed not to publish her last name due to safety concerns.

She wants the province or city to remove all animals from Kucas's property.

Cats unlicensed

Kucas says his pigs and cows are doing just fine. He said he feeds theferal cats and kittens, but because he doesn't provide them shelter, they aren't his and he isn't obligated to get them shots or licensed.

The city made it mandatory for cat owners to register their felines in 2013.

Two cats eat food and water from dishes Laurie placed just off Kucas's property Monday night. (CBC)

Kucas says he uses the cats to keepmice and rats at bay because using conventional pest control measures could poison his livestock.

Hemounted a motion-detection camera on a shed outside after a few of the cats went missing in the night recently.

"Somebody stole them," he said. "They try to come at midnight right inside the yard, and I get upset about it, because would you like to have somebody go inside, jump over your fence and roam around your yard?"

Unpaid taxes

Kucas said he has been trying to obtain a permit to build a new home on his lot but the city has yet to issue a permit. He said he intends on building this summer whether or not the permits come through.

The grey patch of land and red dash is where Kucas's property fronts on St. Mary's Road. (Google Maps)

A city spokesperson said residential demolition and building permits are not issued if an owner has outstanding property taxes.

Kucashas been warned to pay three years in outstanding property taxes, the spokesperon said, and afinal notice will be issued in August.

"Should the taxes remain unpaid, the property will be included in this year's tax sale," the spokesperson said in an email.

Kucas wants to build this home on his property to replace the one in the background that has holes throughout its roof. (Bryce Hoye/CBC)

Corrections

  • An earlier version of this story, based on information from the City of Winnipeg, indicated that a rural-residential zoning designation does not allow owners to keep livestock. In fact, the city clarified in November that while that designation typically does not allow landowners to keep livestock, Kucas has retained rights to do so since he bought the land in the 1970s.
    Dec 19, 2018 3:17 PM CT