Friday, April 3, 2026
ADVT 
National

Day-use pass program expands for B.C. parks

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 15 Jun, 2021 12:02 PM
  • Day-use pass program expands for B.C. parks

Expanded measures are about to take effect to protect the environment while helping people enjoy some of British Columbia's most popular and crowded parks this summer.

The Ministry of Environment and Climate Change Strategy says the second phase of its free day-use pass pilot program rolls out June 22 in five provincial parks, four of them on the south coast.

A statement from the ministry says day-use passes at Joffre Lakes, east of Pemberton, Golden Ears near Maple Ridge, and specific trails within Stawamus Chief and Garibaldi parks along the Sea-to-Sky corridor, will address the surge in visitors while protecting the environment.

The day-pass program will also be applied to the Berg Lake trail in Mount Robson Provincial Park in the Rockies.

Day passes must be booked online but will now be available as early as 7 a.m. the day before arrival and the ministry says the passes will no longer be needed to visit Mount Seymour or Cypress parks on Vancouver's North Shore.

Dawn Carr, executive director of the Canadian Parks Council, says B.C. is trying balance recreation with protection of the environment and "deserves credit for its innovative and responsive approach."

She says recreational demand within all Canadian parks has grown "exponentially."

BC Parks says visitor safety is an important consideration.

Joffre Lakes Provincial Park is being opened in partnership with the Lil'wat and N'Quatqua First Nations while the BC Parks Foundation has worked with the parks service to introduce a team of full-time ambassadors offering safety and responsible recreation tips at the other four parks.

Doug Pope, a manager with North Shore Rescue, B.C.'s busiest volunteer search and rescue organization, says his team supports the plan to greet hikers and discuss safety.

"This is a welcome development to the day-pass program and ensures everyone can enjoy a safer experience," Pope says in the release.

Day use in provincial parks has increased by 34 per cent over the last decade, the statement says.

Twenty-six million day visits were recorded in 2018-19, almost half of them in the south coast region.

BC Parks says it will evaluate the second phase of the day-use pass pilot program when it makes decisions about day passes within the park system.

 

MORE National ARTICLES

No injuries after vandals loosen nuts on car tires

No injuries after vandals loosen nuts on car tires
Const. Gary O'Brien says the teen alerted his friends and may have averted a similar incident because a 17-year-old whose pickup was parked in the same lot received the message and before driving off, he found the lug nuts on a rear tire had also been loosened.

No injuries after vandals loosen nuts on car tires

Committee told of Chinese interference in vaccine

Committee told of Chinese interference in vaccine
The partnership was originally planned to be between China's CanSino Biologics and the Canadian Centre for Vaccinology at Dalhousie University in Nova Scotia. CanSino had been given a licence by the National Research Council to use a Canadian biological product as part of a COVID-19 vaccine.

Committee told of Chinese interference in vaccine

Man pleads guilty to child pornography related charges: VPD

Man pleads guilty to child pornography related charges: VPD
Ryan Jones plead guilty to possession of child pornography and making child pornography available. Vancouver Police Internet Child Exploitation (ICE) investigators located over 2,300 images and 55 videos of child pornography. The ages of the victims in the material ranged from three (3) to 10 years old.

Man pleads guilty to child pornography related charges: VPD

Panel named to advise on new governor general

Panel named to advise on new governor general
Six people are on the panel, which was announced Friday by Intergovernmental Affairs Minister Dominic LeBlanc. He'll co-chair the group with Janice Charette, a former high commissioner to the United Kingdom now filling in as clerk of the Privy Council while regular clerk Ian Shugart is treated for cancer.

Panel named to advise on new governor general

Former PM Stephen Harper sees new Cold War

Former PM Stephen Harper sees new Cold War
While middle-power countries like Canada have a role to play in that war, Harper told a defence conference today that they can't try to set their own courses completely independent of the big two.

Former PM Stephen Harper sees new Cold War

Two B.C. officers face assault charges

Two B.C. officers face assault charges
The release says the vehicle was stopped and the driver arrested in Richmond with the help of another RCMP officer, but the man was allegedly assaulted during the arrest.

Two B.C. officers face assault charges