Opposition is mounting against a plan by Bath city officials to partner with the U.S. Department of Agriculture on trapping and killing potentially rabid animals to address a spate of scary fox attacks and near misses.
A Facebook group, led by a local artist, was created this week to mobilize the critics. KDB Karen Dominguez questioned whether the city considered all its options, or the consequences of killing animals that help keep the populations of mice and rats in check.
“The most amazing thing that’s coming out of this is that it’s such a unique moment to educate about the system of predators and prey,” Dominguez said Thursday. “I’m not really an activist. I speak up for nature. If something doesn’t have a voice, someone needs to speak up for it. But I’ve found that a lot of people want to speak up.”
The Facebook group, created on Wednesday, had 181 members Thursday afternoon and featured scores of comments and replies.
Last week, the Bath city council vote to spend $26,000 on what’s called “controlled trapping.” The details are still being worked out, but experts with the USDA would set as many as 20 traps around the city this month. The animals would be trapped alive and then euthanized so they can be tested for rabies.
The decision was made after a sustained rash of fox encounters that have put the community on edge.
City spokeswoman Lindsey Goudreau said she expected some backlash to the trapping plan but worries that some of it might be rooted in misinformation. Some news stories last week indicated that as many as 400 animals would be killed.
“That’s not an accurate number,” she said, adding that she believed it was derived from the number of traps (20), the number of days the traps will be out (10) and the number of times each days the traps will be checked or emptied (2). “We expected this to create a little outcry, but we’re sort of at a place where we’re darned if we do, darned if we don’t.”
Tanya Espinosa, a spokeswoman for the USDA’s Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service, said she could not discuss details until a cooperative service agreement has been reached with the city. Goudreau said once that happens, the city would host a public meeting to provide more details, but it hadn’t been scheduled as of Thursday.
Dominguez said she hopes people turn out to express their concerns. She said the impact of killing foxes, and raccoons and skunks, is not insignificant. Those animals are relied on to control the population of smaller mammals like mice, voles and rats. And those smaller animals are major carriers of ticks, whose population already has exploded over the last several years.
“Everything is connected,” she said. “If you take something out, you disrupt the whole balance.”
Nate Webb, wildlife division director for the Maine Department of Inland Fisheries & Wildlife, said state and federal officials use controlled trapping regularly to manage certain wildlife populations. Using it for rabies management is unique, though, he said. Rabies is a viral disease that infects the nervous system of mammals, making the infected animal unusually aggressive. It is transmitted primarily through bites and exposure to saliva or spinal fluid from an infected animal. If untreated, it can be fatal.
“We see this as a human health issue now,” he said.
Webb also said the number of animals killed will be nowhere near 400 but did acknowledge that some healthy animals would likely be killed in the process.
The number of confirmed rabies cases in Bath in 2019 was 16, half of them foxes. That was four times the number in the next closest community and twice as many as all of Cumberland County.
So far in 2020, there have been four cases in Bath, all of them involving foxes.
Statewide, the number of rabies cases has increased dramatically in the last five years, from 33 in 2015 to 105 last year. Webb said part of the increase is due to more awareness and better testing. The most common animals found with rabies are raccoons and skunks, but the last three years have seen many more cases involving both grey and red foxes
City officials have been told since last fall that the rabies problem would likely die off. There was a spike of cases in nearby Brunswick in 2018 that didn’t persist into the next year. So, the city educated residents to take precautions and be vigilant.
“We just weren’t seeing it go away,” Goudreau said. “We’ve had people saying they don’t go outside, or ‘I don’t send my kids out,’ or ‘I’m afraid to live in the city.’”
Norman Kenney, a former city fire chief, has been attacked not once but twice outside his home.
The first time, last September, the 88-year-old stomped on the fox and killed it. Then in January, Kenney was attacked a second time. This time, the fox tangled with him for more than 10 minutes until a neighbor helped pull the animal off. Police later shot and killed the fox, which tested positive for rabies. Kenney ended up in the hospital with an eye injury.
“I don’t know if it’ll work or not,” Kenney said of the city’s plan to trap and kills some animals. “But I think it’s good they are giving it a try.”
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