Niche dog sport divided Doug Ford’s caucus as expansion plan killed, then resurrected
TORONTO — A decision over whether to expand an obscure dog sport in Ontario sparked division within Doug Ford’s Progressive Conservative caucus that saw the premier agree to cancel a new licensing regime before later resurrecting it, The Canadian Press has learned.
At trial and train areas, hunters can unleash dogs inside massive, fenced-in areas to hunt down prey such as coyotes, foxes and rabbits. The provincial government insists they are safe for both dogs and wildlife.
In the spring of last year, after a prolonged lobbying campaign from some train and trial hunters, the province released a proposal through the Environmental Registry that would allow for a one-time, 90-day licence application period and allow licences to be transferred to new owners. The changes were part of an omnibus red tape bill that became law in June 2023.
The dog sport had been withering for decades. In 1997, then-premier Mike Harris’s Progressive Conservative government began phasing out the practice by ceasing the issuance of licences needed to operate dog train and trial areas in the province. It also made it illegal to sell or transfer those licences.