Resident cries fowl after St. Thomas City Council 'chickens out' on backyard hen project
With a brand new coop in her backyard, Kay Vaughan is crying fowl, after city council in St. Thomas, Ont. closed the door on allowing backyard hens.
"They chickened out,” said Vaughan.
Vaughan and her family converted their tree house after seven of nine council members were on board with a pilot project to allow backyard hens in April 2023.
However, a report from staff with concerns over the avian flu saw them change course Monday night. Staff recommended putting the project on hold for one year.
“Although I’m generally in favour of this, I’m also in favour of deferring it for a year,” said Coun. Steve Wookey.
“It’s a tough decision, but the reasoning the city has laid out makes sense to me,” added Coun. Tara McCaulley.
St. Thomas, Ont. Council has deferred discussion on a backyard hen pilot project for at least one year due to concerns over avian flu. (Brent Lale/CTV News London)
“I still think it’s a dumb idea,” said Coun. Gary Clarke, who has been against the idea during the entire discussion.
St. Thomas Mayor Joe Preston said the city isn’t closing the coop on a potential project, he just said it won’t happen right now.
“Many communities since we last discussed it [backyard hens] have stopped the practice,” said Preston. “I believe the City of Toronto just removed it completely based on avian flu. We thought we would take caution the same way. Let's delay it for a year while we do a little more research on avian flu, and come back and talk about chickens in a year.”
Poultry veterinarian Mike Petrik believes they made the right choice.
“While we're in flux while we're trying to control this disease and trying to get a handle on it, I don't think it's a bad idea to take a step back and take a pause,” he said.
St. Thomas, Ont. Council has deferred discussion on a backyard hen pilot project for at least one year due to concerns over avian flu. (Brent Lale/CTV News London)Petrik said there have been over 60 million birds put down in North America because of this disease, and over half the cases have been identified in backyard chickens.
“It's extremely contagious,” he added. “The virus is actually adapted to waterfowl, so if a turkey or a chicken gets access to either dust, dander, feathers or droppings from an infected duck, she'll pass that virus on which will devastate the poultry.”
Vaughan calls the decision “a let down.”
“They are just kicking the can down the road,” said Vaughan. “Our five kids have now been like a part of this and the process and learning about how to go to city hall about all of these things and how to make change. It took one person [Jim McCoomb, manager of planning services] to shut down the change that could have been positive for the entire city.”
CTVNews.ca Top Stories

It’s here! Rare asteroid sample lands on Earth after OSIRIS-REx drops cargo
Seven years after OSIRIS-REx was sent into space to retrieve a sample of an asteroid, the NASA-led spacecraft has delivered its cargo into Earth’s orbit, and Canada is set to receive a piece.
A year after Fiona, a traumatized Newfoundland town backs away from the sea
One year after a wave driven by post-tropical storm Fiona slammed into the back of her house and twisted it like a corkscrew, some residents of Port aux Basques, N.L., are backing away from the sea.
Man hospitalized in life-threatening condition after incident at Calgary pub holding eating contest
Calgary paramedics took a man to hospital in life-threatening condition on Saturday after an incident at the Ship and Anchor pub.
Hot rental market makes search 'stressful' for many -- and it won't get better soon
The competitive rental market across the country is seeing multiple factors combine: high interest rates deter buyers and add to rental demand, still-high inflation is squeezing renter budgets, there's an undersupply of purpose-built rental units and population growth is fuelling demand.
Canada’s Wonderland ride stuck upside down with passengers on it for 30 minutes
Passengers on a ride at Canada’s Wonderland were stuck upside down for almost 30 minutes on Saturday night.
BREAKING Canadian autoworkers ratify deal with Ford Motor Company
Five days after reaching a tentative agreement, Unifor members have voted to ratify a new collective agreement with the Ford Motor Company.
Murder charge laid in killing of B.C. Mountie
The day after an RCMP officer was killed and two others were injured while executing a search warrant in Coquitlam, B.C., charges of murder and attempted murder have been laid.
Sikh groups ask Canadian political parties to present 'united front' against India
Two groups in the Canadian Sikh diaspora are calling for Canada's political parties to "present a united front" on India after Prime Minister Justin Trudeau announced a "potential link" between the shooting death of a local leader and the Indian government.
Lender can't foreclose on B.C. woman's home because mortgage was obtained through fraud
A B.C. woman has won the right to stay in her home after convincing a judge that the mortgage her son took out on the property was obtained fraudulently.