RCMP saw potential human-wolf conflict after an escape. The Greater Vancouver Zoo did not

Police and security outside the parking lot of the Greater Vancouver Zoo in Aldergrove, a community in Langley, B.C. on Aug. 17, 2022, the day after at least one wolf escaped the facility. (Gian Paolo Mendoza/CBC - image credit)
Police and security outside the parking lot of the Greater Vancouver Zoo in Aldergrove, a community in Langley, B.C. on Aug. 17, 2022, the day after at least one wolf escaped the facility. (Gian Paolo Mendoza/CBC - image credit)

Internal RCMP documents show police saw the potential for human-wolf conflict after the animals escaped their enclosure at the Greater Vancouver Zoo in August, despite the facility announcing there was no danger to the public.

The zoo in Aldergrove was shut for three days while workers and conservation officers searched for the wolves, which Langley RCMP said got loose when someone deliberately cut a hole in their enclosure.

Documents provided to The Canadian Press under a freedom of information request reveal discussions between conservation officers, government officials and zoo staff over safety risks and what to tell the public, deciding who was responsible for the capture and confusion over how many animals escaped.

In one email chain dated Aug. 16, a government spokesman describes the matter as a public safety issue once a wolf is deemed outside the confines of the facility, while another urges colleagues not to "downplay the public risk."

Gian Paolo Mendoza/CBC
Gian Paolo Mendoza/CBC

A separate internal report from Langley RCMP the same day lists as a strategic consideration the potential for conflict between human or domestic animals with one wolf if it had escaped the zoo grounds.

The zoo, which said that day that there was "no danger to the public," did not immediately respond to requests for comment.

A three-year-old female wolf called Chia was later found dead on a roadside outside the zoo, and all the other animals were recovered.