Councillors are to call on North Yorkshire Council to ban trail hunting on land owned by the local authority.
At a meeting next week, Labour councillor Rich Maw, who represents Weaponness and Ramshill, and Green councillor Arnold Warneken, who represents Ouseburn, will table a motion calling for the practice to be prohibited.
Trail hunting involves laying an animal scent, usually urine, for hounds to track and is followed by a group on foot or horseback.
The practice is legal, but organisations such as animal welfare charity the RSPCA and the League Against Cruel Sports have called for it to be banned.
At a meeting in May, Cllr Gareth Dadd, deputy leader of North Yorkshire Council, said the council “can’t confirm” whether or not trail hunts take place on its land.
He added that the authority was “not aware” of any formalised hunts taking place on its property.
However, in their motion, Cllr Maw and Warneken said the hunts had been used as a “loophole to carry on hunting foxes and other animals”.
It adds:
“Across the country, hunts are using trail hunts as a loophole to carry on hunting foxes and other animals.
“So called terrier men are frequently present with shovels and terriers, while scent trails are often not present.”
The motion adds that the Hunting Act 2004, which bans fox hunting, is unworkable and calls on the council to ban any trail hunts on council owned land.
It says:
“This council resolves to ban trail hunting, exempt hunting, hound exercise and hunt meets outright across all council land where legally possible, including any new tenancies where there are positive covenants attached to the land that currently require the council as owner to allow trail hunting events and formal gatherings.”
Councillors on North Yorkshire Council will debate the motion on July 19.
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The move comes as organisations have called on the government to change the law on trail hunting.
A pressure group called Time For Change, which is led by the League Against Cruel Sports, was set up last month to lobby ministers to strengthen the Hunting Act.
It includes 32 animal welfare charity groups such as the RSPCA, Human Society International UK, Cats Protection and PETA.
Andy Knott, chief executive of the League Against Cruel Sports, said:
“We’ve known since very soon after the Hunting Act 2004 was introduced that hunts were using its many exemptions – and something they call trail hunting – to carry on chasing and killing wildlife with hounds.
“We and other like-minded organisations have been calling out for the law to be strengthened, for its many exemptions to be removed, and for trail hunting to be outlawed.”