Saskatoon police chief supports regulating bear spray sales after spike in attacks
Saskatoon is seeing a rise in attacks involving bear spray.
There have been 309 bear spray attacks so far this year, about a 23 per cent increase from last year.
In November, bear mace was sprayed inside the Midtown Plaza food court. In October, it was discharged on a city bus.
Saskatoon Police Chief Cam McBride described the misuse of bear spray as an "incapacitating weapon."
"Imagine having somebody spray shampoo in your eyes and then have that shampoo rubbed into your eyes with sandpaper — that's kind of how it feels. The pain is tremendous, and it's long lasting," McBride told CTV News.
McBride said the Saskatoon Police Service is working to "get a handle" on the crime.
He said it's important to know if bear spray used in the attacks has been legally purchased, and how it's getting from "one person to another."
In July, Edmonton amended its business licence bylaw to require retailers that sell bear spray to record transaction information.
Cary Tarasoff, who has run for mayor twice, wants Saskatoon to adopt a similar bylaw.
He's asking the city to regulate the sale and display of bear spray — an idea McBride said he supports.
"I would support any positive change that makes the process of bear spray getting into the hands of individuals that use it for a criminal purpose; making that more difficult. I support that 100 per cent," McBride said.
Bear spray regulation will be discussed in a city meeting on Dec. 11.
CTVNews.ca Top Stories
Trudeau promoting backbenchers in sizable cabinet shuffle coming Friday: sources
Prime Minister Justin Trudeau is planning a sizable cabinet shuffle on Friday, and it's shaping up to see several Liberal backbenchers promoted to ministerial posts, sources confirm to CTV News.
Prime minister's team blindsided by Freeland's resignation: source
The first time anyone in the senior ranks of Prime Minister Justin Trudeau's office got any indication Chrystia Freeland was about to resign from cabinet was just two hours before she made the announcement on social media, a senior government source tells CTV News.
'Tragic and sudden loss': Toronto police ID officer who died after suspected medical episode while on duty
A police officer who died after having a suspected medical episode on duty was executing a search warrant in connection with an ongoing robbery investigation in North York, Toronto police confirmed Thursday.
Ontario town seeks judicial review after being fined $15K for refusing to observe Pride Month
An Ontario community fined $15,000 for not celebrating Pride Month is asking a judge to review the decision.
The Royal Family unveils new Christmas cards with heartwarming family photos
The Royal Family is spreading holiday cheer with newly released Christmas cards.
EXCLUSIVE Canada's immigration laws 'too lax,' Trump's border czar says
Amid a potential tariff threat that is one month away, U.S. president-elect Donald Trump's border czar Tom Homan is calling talks with Canada over border security 'positive' but says he is still waiting to hear details.
Who received the longest jail terms in the Gisele Pelicot rape trial?
A French court found all 51 defendants guilty on Thursday in a mass rape case including Dominique Pelicot, who repeatedly drugged his then wife, Gisele, and allowed dozens of strangers into the family home to rape her.
Crowd crush kills 35 children at funfair in Nigeria, police say
At least 35 children were killed and six others critically injured in a crowd crush at a funfair in southwest Nigeria on Wednesday, police said.
Scientists think they know why Stonehenge was rebuilt thousands of years ago
Scientists made a major discovery this year linked to Stonehenge — one of humanity’s biggest mysteries — and the revelations keep coming.