TLC, The day before, F & W (a local resident) was going door-to-door because the bear was believed to be in one of our yards. A woman came face to face with the bear on her deck, it approached her and then ran away. (All the dogs around here were going nuts for quite a while, so they thought it was still here.). I ended up calling someone who had the presence of mind to ask for the F & W guy's card and got his number.
I don't disagree with the F & W's efforts of trying to make it afraid of people. I think since it is so young, it might actually work. (I didn't think the guy was going to catch it and kill it yesterday.) When you consider towns with bear problems (Mammoth for one), I think leaving it be, to forage among homes, is a recipe for disaster.
I suppose I could have made a lot of noise and scared it away. But even a 50 lb yearling could cause me some damage if it saw its only escape as through me. I once had a feral 4 pound house cat who had nearly given me stitches, so maybe I'm a little too sensitive to the power of fear and anger in a creature with sharp teeth and claws. . .
The long term is on my mind. If he becomes habituated to people from youth, he's not going to be a night time marauder fishing through trash cans. He's going to be out and about in the daytime. The kids here play outside all the time. We live on a tight little cul de sac with a 2 yr old, a 3 yr old, I think a 4 yr old and a 5 yr old, a 7 yr old, an 8 yr old, and 3 frequent visitors who walk up to play in that age range, and a 4 or 5 yr old weekender. Plus occasional other young visitors. Little children are notorious for their lack of common sense. This mama bear was thinking of these kids' safety (as well as the aforementioned).