Ross River chief pleaded with Yukon gov't to continue dog control program - Action News
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Ross River chief pleaded with Yukon gov't to continue dog control program

Letters between Chief Jack Caesar and a Yukon government minister show that the First Nation repeatedly asked that a dog control program be continued. Last fall, a Ross River man was killed by aggressive dogs.

'Your decision to discontinue funding...places citizens in our community at risk,' chief said

Jack Caesar is the chief of the Ross River Dena Council. Letters show that the First Nation repeatedly asked the Yukon government to continue a dog control program that ended in 2010. (Nancy Thomson/CBC)

A series of letters in early 2011 between Ross River Dena Council Chief Jack Caesar and then-Community Services Minister ArchieLangreveal that the First Nationpleaded with the Yukon government to continue with the Yukon Dog Management Pilot Program.

The issue has particular urgency in the wake of last week's news that22-year-old Shane Gladawas killed by dogs in the community last fall.

Your decision to discontinue funding... places citizens in our community at risk- Ross River Dena Council chief Jack Caesar in a 2011 letter to the Yukon government

The pilot program involved a number of measures, including a spay/neuter clinic in the community, and development of culturally appropriate dog control programs. The governmentcanned it in 2010.

"Your decision to discontinue funding [for the pilot program]... places citizens in our community at risk," Caesar wrote to Lang in a January 2011 letter.

Lang replied a couple of weeks later, saying his department was reviewing the program, "to determine what pieces of the program we can effectively deliver this year given current capacity and budget."

Another letter from Caesar toLangin March of that year noted that the "cost of the program...is far less than the cost associated with potential civil claims incurred by YG [the Yukon government]as a result of inappropriate or absent dog management.

"It is the YG, and not theRRDC [Ross River Dena Council], that will be held liable for consequences caused by the lack of dog management-related Ross River infrastructure," the letter also states.

In another letter six months later, to newly-elected Community Services Minister Elaine Taylor, Caesar pleadedagain for help.

"Minister Taylor, will you please direct Community Services staff to move forward with the .... pilot program?"

The Yukon government did not resurrect theprogram.

First Nation waits for response from government

Today, Caesarcontinues to wait for elected officials from the Yukon government to contact him on what he considers anurgent public safety issue the community'songoing problem with aggressive dogs.

It's been over a week since Yukoncoroner Kirsten Macdonald met with the community and said she wouldlet the First Nation"take the lead" on the issue.

Yukon's chief coroner Kirsten MacDonald met with about 100 residents of Ross River to talk about the death of Shane Glada, who was killed by dogs in the community last fall. (Nancy Thomson/CBC)

But Caesar has saidthat the community cannot do it alone, and needs real help from the Yukon government.

On Tuesday in the legislature, Liberal Leader Sandy Silver took up the cause, pressing the government to explain exactly how it has helped Ross River.

"What steps is the government taking in the short term to address the current public safety concerns in the community of Ross River?" Silver asked.

"Has anyone from this government and I mean, elected official, spoken with the Ross River Dena Council since this public meeting was held?"

Environment Minister Wade Istchenko said the coroner's report onGlada's deathis still forthcoming, and the government doesn't want to interfere with that.

He added that the government has offered to help the First Nation.

"We're up front, right there working with Ross River on whatever they need. We've reached out to the chief, we've done a lot. We've sent letters and we're working with them as we speak."

However, the chief and deputy chief of the Ross River Dena Council say they have not heard from either the minister of community services, the environment minister, or the MLA for Ross River, Stacey Hassard.

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