
B.C. resident fined $60,000 for feeding black bears with bulk groceries
A woman from Whistler, B.C., has been fined the highest penalty under B.C.'s Wildlife Act for repeatedly feeding black bears.
Zuzana Stevikova was sentenced in North Vancouver Provincial Court earlier this week and has been penalized $60,000 in the precedent-setting case.
RELATED: Fall is an important time to be aware of bears. What you need to know
According to the B.C. Conservation Officer Service, Stevikova had been purchasing up to 10 cases of apples, 50 pounds of carrots, and 15 dozen eggs on a weekly basis to feed black bears during the summer of 2018.
Conservation officers were tipped off in July 2018, after receiving a complaint that a resident in Whistler's Kadenwood neighbourhood had been feeding bears.

(Getty Images)
Officers were forced to put down three bears that had been frequenting the area and had become so habituated to human food and presence that they showed no fear of people.
Conservation officer Sgt. Simon Gravel said once bears learn to link humans with food, they become a public safety risk.
"The primary concern of the COS is public safety. Illegally feeding or placing attractants to lure dangerous wildlife, such as bears, is an extremely dangerous activity," said Gravel.
The Conservation Officer Service say the majority of the fine has been ordered to go to the Habitat Conservation Trust Foundation, and that they hope the penalty will deter others from feeding wildlife.
Thumbnail courtesy of Getty Images.
The story was written by Meera Bains, originally published on Oct. 1, 2021 for CBC News.