High Court to decide on Nov. 6 whether to hear case of B.C. ostriches - Medicine Hat News

By Canadian Press

High Court to decide on Nov. 6 whether to hear case of B.C. ostriches - Medicine Hat News

The Supreme Court of Canada is set to issue a decision next week on whether to hear a last-ditch appeal against an order to cull a flock of ostriches at a British Columbia farm. A list of leave applications that will be ruled upon on next Thursday includes the challenge by Universal Ostrich Farms to the Canadian Food Inspection Agency's order to cull the flock after an outbreak of avian flu was detected and a cull order was issued on Dec. 31, 2024. If the court decides not to hear the case and lifts a stay on the cull, there will be no legal impediment to the killing of hundreds of birds, while if leave to appeal is granted, a final decision on the fate of the flock would come after a hearing. Katie Pasitney, the farm's spokesperson and daughter of one of the owners, said in a Facebook post that her "stomach sank a little bit" on Friday. She said the world needs to pray for them. "I walk in faith as my feet hit the ground each day. This story has already been written. The ending has been decided, we just need to believe," she said. Legal experts have said that the court is unlikely to take up the case, expressing doubt about any lingering legal controversies it could clear up after both the Federal Court and Federal Court of Appeal sided with the Canadian Food Inspection Agency. Emmett Macfarlane, a political-science professor at the University of Waterloo, said last month that the odds of the High Court hearing the farm's appeal are "very low." He said if there had been disagreement among lower courts over the power of the federal agency, that would make it "a much more natural case for the Supreme Court of Canada to clarify the law itself." Paul Daly, a law professor at the University of Ottawa, said he'd be surprised if the court decides to hear the case because the legal issues involved are "not particularly novel or complicated." Daly said in an interview in September that the social media uproar around the ostrich farm won't influence the Supreme Court "one way or the other." "I think it's more likely that the Supreme Court ignores the public outcry and just takes a dispassionate view of the merits of the application." The owners of the farm outside the tiny community of Edgewood in southeastern B.C. have been fighting the cull for 10 months, arguing the surviving ostriches show no signs of illness and should be spared

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