Timelines, Constraints and Safeguards for Resumption of Crow-shooting Operations
Ministry of National DevelopmentSpeakers
Summary
This question concerns the timeline and safety safeguards for resuming crow-shooting operations to manage bird disamenities, as raised by Dr Charlene Chen. Minister Chee Hong Tat stated that operations will resume in March 2026 under strict safety protocols developed with the Ministry of Home Affairs. Safeguards include upward shooting trajectories, cordoned zones, and the use of licensed contractors overseen by personnel to ensure public safety. Priority sites will be determined by public feedback and technical feasibility, as part of a holistic strategy including trapping and nest removal. Minister Chee Hong Tat also emphasized that community hygiene and a ban on bird feeding are essential for long-term population control.
Transcript
29 Dr Charlene Chen asked the Minister for National Development in respect of the resumption of shooting operations to mitigate crow-related disamenities (a) what is the expected timeline for implementation; (b) what operational constraints affect roll-out; and (c) how interim hotspot management is calibrated to protect residents, especially children and seniors while balancing safety and ecological considerations.
Mr Chee Hong Tat: As announced by the Minister for National Development on 23 February 2026, the National Parks Board (NParks) will resume crow shooting operations progressively from the second half of March 2026.
NParks has worked with the Ministry of Home Affairs (MHA) and the Singapore Police Force to develop strict shooting protocols to reduce potential safety risks. These include ensuring that the shooting trajectory of the shotgun pellets is always directed upwards, cordoning off the shooting zone with signs and deploying additional personnel to manage public access and restrict movement during operations. All shooting operations will be conducted by licensed wildlife management contractors who are certified in the handling of firearms and carefully overseen by appointed personnel to ensure full compliance with the safety controls.
Sites will be prioritised based on several factors including the volume of public feedback regarding crow-related issues and the technical feasibility of conducting safe shooting operations at each location. The progressive rollout of crow shooting operations will allow NParks to refine safety protocols and finetune risk mitigation measures before scaling up its operations.
The resumption of crow shooting operations is one component of NParks’ holistic pest bird management strategy. It will complement existing crow management efforts, such as direct population control through crow trapping and removal as well as crow nest removal.
Ultimately, we need everyone to work together. Do not feed the crows and pigeons. Keep our environment clean. These small steps will help keep our estates liveable for everyone.