Pigeon feeding ban can't come soon enough for Toronto landlord stuck in 'horrifying' situation - Action News
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Toronto

Pigeon feeding ban can't come soon enough for Toronto landlord stuck in 'horrifying' situation

Cristina Enrietti-Zoppo, a landlord in Kensington Market, hopes the city's proposed ban on feeding pigeons will soon become a reality. She has a tenant who dumps scoop after scoop of bird seed on her property, attracting not only pigeons but rats.

Toronto considering banning the feeding of pigeons on public and private property

Pigeons outside Cristina Enrietti-Zoppo's rental property where a tenant is feeding them scoop after scoop of bird seed each day. She lives next door and says both properties are coated in droppings. (Cristina Enrietti-Zoppo/Supplied)

From her house next door, Cristina Enrietti-Zoppo watches as her tenantthrows scoopafterscoopof bird seed from an upstairs window into the front yard below.

Dozens of pigeons peck away until fat rats move in to clean up the rest.

In the last two weeks alone, Enrietti-Zoppo estimates her tenant has bought and scattered more than 100 kilograms of seed.

It's a "horrifying" daily ritual that's been going on for more than a year, she said.

Cristina Enrietti-Zoppo speaks outside her Toronto home as pigeons gather behind her near Kensington Market on July 19, 2021. (Michael Aitkens/CBC)

Now, the rats are nesting along the front of the Kensington Market row house and she's worried about the diseases they carry and can transmit to humans, like bubonicplague. Pigeon feces coatthe front walkway, window sills and roofs.The stench permeates her own home, as have fleas.

"These are not just esthetic concerns, these are health concerns," she said. "The whole neighbourhood is stinking mad about it."

City looks to expand ban

As Toronto's bylaw stands right now, there's virtuallynothing Enrietti-Zoppo can do to stop her tenant from dumping piles ofseedson the property. The city says it prohibits the feeding of wildlife, but only in parks. It alsorequirestenants to keep their balconies free of droppings, but not of bird seed.

Last week, council passed a motion for the city to start developing a ban that extends to all public and private spaces in Toronto. For Enrietti-Zoppo, it can't come soon enough.

"I'm at my wits end. I don't know what to do anymore," she said. "I just have no other resources."

Cristina Enrietti-Zoppo shows where rats have dug in search of bird seed scattered by her tenant. (Michael Aitkens/CBC)

A bylaw officer did issue a warning to hertenant when he was feeding pigeons at a nearby parkettein December 2019, she said. But when thetenant did the same outside the rental house, she, as the property owner,was the one served a violation notice from the city on June 2 for "littering and dumping of refuse" consisting of"food grains."

She said she'srepeatedly asked her tenant to refrain, with no success.She's collected signed affidavits from other neighbours in support of ceasing the pigeon feeding and isattempting to evict himthrough the Landlord and Tenant Board, a two-year process triggered by myriad issues.

'People are really fed up'

Coun. Kristyn Wong-Tam proposedthe feedingbanafter receiving calls from residents about parks, sidewalks, squares and laneways being inundated with flocks of pigeons. She alsonoticed a proliferation ofnets and needle strips on buildings and balconies a stop-gap measure to deter the birds when residents continue to feed them.

"With respect to pigeons, they grow and repopulate very, very quickly," said Wong-Tam, who noted she's read up on the birds.

"They're also incredibly smart once you start teaching them that they don't need to feed and hunt for themselves. They'll just stick around."

City staff will report back to the Economic and Community Development Committee onMarch 2022 about the feasibility of expanding the bylaw, as well as what's needed to bolster enforcement and target those doing the feeding, rather than property owners like Enrietti-Zoppo.

"The intention here is not to penalize those who have nothing to do with the pigeons eating," Wong-Tam said."Landlords should have a set of rules that they can point to and say this is what's prohibited by law."

Wong-Tam saidthe bylaw expansion would be accompanied by a public education campaign about the negative consequences of feeding pigeons and how to clean up after them safely.

"People are really fed up with the large amounts of pigeons," she said.

"I'mvery confident that we're on the right track and this absolutely needs to be done."