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The Rural Voice, 1991-06, Page 6�t FARMING 019':(-0°ISA LOT OF WORK Do you need a helping hand? �S�9F Students will work on short notice for: 4s4,). an hour a day a week or more CONTACT: CANADA EMPLOYMENT CENTRES FOR STUDENTS GODERICH 524-2744 EXETER 235-1711 LISTOWEL 291-2922 Canada \ 11♦. Government of Canada Gouvernement du Canada Employment and Immigration Canada Ertploi et Immigration Canada 91 — FEEDBACK 1 1 gural VOi« III►l1'►IAIl hINI ►11I��i aaL / TRESPASSING fra.211ARK ISI f ni m COMMERCIAL AGRICULTURAL INDUSTRIAL "OUR FOUNDATIONS ARE SATISFIED CUSTOMERS" HANOVER, ONTARIO (519) 364-3609 2 THE RURAL VOICE Re: feedback column, Letter Misleading, April issue of The Rural Voice. First of all, I am forced to say that I find Mr. Taylor's insinuation that rural landowners are uneducated to be in very poor taste, and totally uncalled for. Of course, we all realize that this is the normal attitude of most hunters toward rural landowners. If I were representing rural land- owners and had been in any way in- volved in formulating the present tres- pass act, I would be ashamed to admit it. Leaving a hunter to guard the rights of rural landowners sounds just like the old fable about leaving the fox to guard the chickens. "The Trespass Act was designed by hunters, for hunters, it has absolutely no teeth in it." — quoted from a statement made by Sergeant Ray Peshaw, who, at the time, was Detachment Commander, Burk's Falls O.P.P. For this reason hunters, generally speaking, do not respect private land, or recognize the existence of the Trespass Act. Hunters will continue to trespass until the law is changed to require the landowner's signature to validate their hunting license. For any regulation to be effective, it must be simple to ap- ply, and carry penalties strong enough to act as a deterrent. The charge of hunting without a valid license meets both of these requirements. The charge of trespass certainly does not. I believe the trespass problem applies more to hunters than it does to other types of trespassers. Trespassers, for example, carrying a fishing rod, are not nearly as arrogant as a trespassing hunter who is carrying a shotgun. The April 1989 issue of the publi- cation Ontario Out Of Doors quotes John Clarke, a former member of Me- donte Township Council, as saying,