Squirrel poisoning raises concerns
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Alex Coolman
CORONA DEL MAR -- The green plastic containers are hidden beneath thin
layers of soil or dried grass on the steep hillside at Inspiration Point.
They are traps, filled with poisoned bait, designed to kill the squirrels
that scurry through the underbrush.
Sternly worded labels on the containers warn that their contents should
be kept away from animals and children, but the objects are just a few
feet away from the pedestrian path that leads to the beach.
Some residents have raised the concern that poison and public beaches
might be an awkward mix.
“How can they know that it’s just going to affect the squirrels?” asked
Newport Beach resident Linda Koluvek, who was eating lunch Tuesday at
Inspiration Point. “What about the cats who are running around here? And
then you have the gulls and the pigeons.”
The purpose of the plastic bait containers, said Dave Niederhaus, Newport
Beach general services director, is to help curtail the serious erosion
problems that the squirrels cause by burrowing into the already-unstable
hillside.
“At Inspiration Point, we had a substantial landslide, partly as a result
of [squirrels’] burrowing, partly as a result of the wind and rain,” he
said.
The program, which has bait containers installed at several locations in
the hills around Corona del Mar beaches, has been conducted for years,
Niederhaus said.
Public concern about the poisoning, however, seems to wax and wane
episodically. Despite the current trend to question the devices,
Niederhaus argued that the city’s efforts are no more risky than many
domestic pest control solutions.
“It’s just a common rat or ground squirrel material that you or I could
buy at Home Depot,” he said.
The dozens of squirrels scampering across the hillside at Inspiration
Point would seem to indicate that the program is only of limited success.
But Niederhaus said things would be even worse with the absence of the
poisoning.
“They’d be overrun there,” he said.
It was the ineffectiveness of poisoning its wild rabbit population that
recently drove Leisure World officials to consider a mass shooting of the
creatures -- a proposal that was eventually shelved.
Niederhaus said executing squirrels with guns was not a practice the city
planned to consider.
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