Home | WebMail |

      Calgary | Regions | Local Traffic Report | Advertise on Action News | Contact

NL

Moose-hunt hotline would save lives: N.L. group

A citizens group wants the N.L. government to set up a hotline so hunters can be dispatched quickly to shoot moose near highways before they tangle with traffic.
This car collided with a moose in Newfoundland and Labrador during the summer of 2009. ((CBC))
A citizens group wants the Newfoundland and Labradorgovernment to set up a hotline so hunters can be dispatched quickly to shoot moose near highwaysbefore they tangle with traffic.

The latest proposal by theSave Our People Action Committeeaims toreduce themore than 700 moose-vehicle collisions in the province every year.

Committee leader Eugene Nippard of Grand Falls-Windsor, incentral Newfoundland, says helost a friend to a collision with a moose on the Trans-Canada Highway last year.

"That nuisance moose was there two days. He should have been taken out of there. He wasn't. My friend was killed."

Nippard has been calling for action ever since.

He received support from more than 20,000 people who signed a petition calling for a moose cull last summer.

Thegovernment hasn't adopted the cull, and hasso far rejected the group's idea of fencing off highways, saying that's too expensive.

Moose such as this one seen in southern Newfoundland, on the province's Burin Peninsula, are common sightings on highways in the province. ((Courtesy Sharon Pardy))
But on Wednesday, a spokesperson for the Department of Natural Resources said Minister Kathy Dunderdale will look at the group'shotline proposal.

Moose are native to Labrador but aren't native to the island of Newfoundland.

The animals were brought to Gander Bay in 1878 and then to Howley, western Newfoundland, in 1904.

Wildlife officials estimate there are more than 120,000 moose in the province.