With files from CTV Vancouver’s Scott Hurst
A parking lot was built over a nearby watershed for geese in 2013, and the birds have been migrating over to the monument ever since. (CTV).
CTV Vancouver
Published Wednesday, September 9, 2015 3:22PM PDT
Last Updated Wednesday, September 9, 2015 3:27PM PDT
A Vancouver memorial to honour women who have been victims of violence - specifically the 14 women killed at Montreal’s Ecole Polytechnique in 1989 - is being desecrated by a flock of Canada geese, leaving the city scrambling for a solution.
The memorial is located in Thornton Park, near the Canadian National Railway Station at Main Street and Terminal Avenue. A parking lot was built over a nearby watershed for geese in 2013, and the birds have been migrating over to the monument ever since.
Elinor Warkentin, a volunteer with the Women’s Monument Committee, says the beautiful design of the memorial is partially responsible for attracting the birds. The monument is comprised of 14 granite benches, all with a scar in the middle to collect rain water and symbolize a pool of tears.
“It’s a beautiful thought, beautiful symbolism, but the geese only see it as water,” says Warkentin. “The geese drink the water, and while they’re here they defecate all over the benches and the site of the monument, which makes it difficult for people to reflect and enjoy the space.”
Warkentin says the Women’s Monument Committee is currently working with the Vancouver Park Board to come up with a way to move the geese away from the monument.
“We want the park board staff to come up with a solution that’s humane [to the geese] and will honour the monument,” she says. “People come here to remember their sisters, their mothers, their aunts, women who have been murdered… and this is just not honouring the monument. It’s heartbreaking to see this.”
Park board commissioner Stuart Mackinnon says this is an issue that is very close to his heart. He was a student at Concordia University when the Montreal massacre occurred.
“It was quite an emotional time and event in Montreal, and I’ve carried that with me here,” he says. “I was very pleased to be able to help the committee.”
On Monday, commissioners will be voting on a motion for staff to come up with long-term solutions. One of the difficulties facing the board is that moving wildlife is under federal jurisdiction, Mackinnon adds, and a federal permit is needed.
“[The feds] won’t issue a permit to move wildlife until they’ve seen that you have tried various things,” he says. “So the park board needs to put together a plan of things we can do to dissuade the geese from being there. If none of those measures work, than we can apply to the federal government.”
In the meantime, crews will be cleaning the monument at least once every two weeks.
“This has become a focal point for memory, for remembering, and for action against violence against women,” says Mackinnon. “Keeping [the monument] in a form that’s clean and open to the public is very important to me, and I think also the other commissioners on the park board.”
With files from CTV Vancouver’s Scott Hurst
As a female artist myself, I look at the benches of tears and they are made to be inviting creatures to sit and drink. What on earth does anyone expect. Geese live in Vancouver. Women, get a grip! Geese were here first. You just took over a territory and decided it should be made free of geese. Move your monument where geese don't like to be or just keep cleaning it. Dead women won't mind the lively geese blessing the monument. The women would probably be more sympathetic to the geese than the attitude of getting rid of them.
ReplyDeleteActually the geese were not there first. They were pushed out of another space behind the station when a parking lot was built. The problem started long after the Marker of Change was built.
ReplyDelete