‘Very low odds’: Top court expert says B.C. ostrich case will struggle to get hearing
An expert on the Supreme Court of Canada says a British Columbia ostrich farm faces “very low odds” for getting a last-ditch hearing to stop the cull of about 400 birds.
Emmett Macfarlane, a political-science professor at the University of Waterloo who has written a book on Canada’s highest court, said Monday that the court focuses on cases where there is a question that needs to be clarified about law, not to re-litigate possible errors in individual situations.
Macfarlane said that in the case of Universal Ostrich Farms in Edgewood, B.C., multiple lower courts have decided not to stop the cull, suggesting there isn’t much legal “controversy” that would require the Supreme Court of Canada to step in.
The farm has been fighting for months to try to stop an order by the Canadian Food Inspection Agency to cull the ostriches over an avian flu outbreak, saying the birds are now healthy and scientifically valuable.



