Spring bear hunt good news for outfitters, lodge owner says - Action News
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Sudbury

Spring bear hunt good news for outfitters, lodge owner says

An Ontario lodge owner who says her business dried up when the spring bear hunt was cancelled in 1999 is thrilled to know tourists will be allowed to take part again.

Former politician who was public face of hunt opposition says he always personally supported it

(Ontario Ministry of Natural Resources)

An Ontario lodge owner who says her business driedup when the spring bear hunt was cancelled in 1999 is thrilled to know tourists will be allowed to take part again.

"A politician has finally grown a brain," Roxanne Lynn ofMoosehorn Lodge near Chapleausaid. "Finally realized that bringing back the spring bear hunt is the only solution."

The Ontario government announced last week it would expand itspilot program for hunting black bears in the spring.


A scaled-down version was allowed last yearnear Timmins, Thunder Bay, Sudbury, Sault Ste Marie and North Bay, but next year it will extend across the province and non-residents will be allowed to take part.

Lynn said 90 per cent of her business disappeared when the hunt was scrapped.
The Moose Horn Lodge could see tourists who haven't taken part in a spring bear hunt there for 17 years. (moosehorn.net)

She invested a million dollars in her family's lodgeto try to go after new markets and stay afloat - "Do or die really for us."

Now she hopes to welcome back her old customers this April.

Meanwhile, a formernorthern politician who often defended the hunt's cancellation for years said he hadalways privately campaigned for it to return.

Long-time Timiskaming-CochraneLiberal MPP and former natural resources minister David Ramsay said he's not surprised the government has come around to restoring the bear hunt, but doubts the controversy will ever fade.

"Because you get very strong viewpoints from all sides on this, it becomes big politics," he said.

He himself was overruled at the cabinet table.

"As a northerner I understood the part of the culture and the part of the economy that it played," he said. "Very difficult issue as there was this clash of values in the province."