Sunday, December 21, 2025
ADVT 
National

Not Far From The Madding Crowd: Parks Canada Seeks To Manage Free 2017 Influx

The Canadian Press, 21 Apr, 2016 12:09 PM
    OTTAWA — When Finance Minister Bill Morneau used a speech in Chicago on Wednesday to toss out an open invitation to Americans to visit Canada's natural splendour in 2017, he may have inadvertently highlighted a potential downside for one of the Liberal government's election promises.
     
    Overcrowding at some popular national parks will need to be managed as Canada flings open the gates.
     
    "In case you don't know, it's our 150th anniversary next year in Canada, 2017, and we're making all (national) parks free of entry fees next year," Morneau said as he wrapped up an appearance at the Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago. "So as you're thinking about your vacation plans for 2017, come to Canada!"
     
    The Chicago audience laughed appreciatively, no doubt imagining the empty wilderness of their northern neighbour.
     
    But Canadians who are already booking campsites know that the most accessible gems of the national park system fill up quickly to peak-season capacity.
     
    Parks Canada opened reservations as of January this year, rather than April, and bookings are up 20 per cent so far over the same date in 2015, spokeswoman Natalie Fay said in an email.
     
    "Some offers at certain locations are already heavily booked, particularly on long weekends and during the busy summer months, but others still have quite a lot of availability, particularly during the shoulder seasons," said Fay. 
     
    A weekday morning visit to Bruce Peninsula National Park on Georgian Bay last July illustrates the point: By 10 a.m., visitors hiking the half hour to the spectacular sea cave in the Niagara Escarpment found a rugged beach literally crawling with humanity.
     
     
    "During the summer months, parking to access these sites fills to capacity regularly, resulting in visitors being denied access," cautions a Bruce Peninsula tourism web site.
     
    It's the similar situation at the most popular parks across Canada.
     
    This week, that uncomfortable truth was raised at a House of Commons committee, where Environment Minister Catherine McKenna was testifying about her new portfolio.
     
    Liberal MP John Aldag, who spent 32 years managing operations at national historic sites and parks before running for office in 2015, cited a recent visit to Banff where traffic is already a concern.
     
    "As we prepare for the free admission, what sort of thought is also going into maintaining ecological and cultural integrity of our parks and sites?" Aldag asked McKenna, while acknowledging the $83.3 million over five years in the Liberal budget to help Parks Canada accommodate the free admissions.
     
    "I know on a summer's day in Lake Louise there's no parking already and I'm just wondering, with the money that's coming, if there will be any opportunities to mitigate, perhaps, increased visitation?"
     
    "I'm not criticizing," Aldag hastened to add. "It's a wonderful thing for providing access."
     
    McKenna acknowledged that discussions about park capacity are underway, although she downplayed the scope of the problem.
     
    "I could not think of a better way to celebrate the beauty of Canada than through free access," said the Liberal minister.
     
    While some national parks have large numbers of visitors, others see fewer than 100 people a year. However it seems unlikely that free admission will suddenly turn remote northern parks such as Auyuittuq National Park on Baffin Island into tourist meccas.
     
    The question, McKenna told the committee, is "how do we maintain the ecological integrity of our parks — which is paramount — at the same time getting more people out to our parks to enjoy them?"
     
    Parks Canada says it is increasing its inventory of campsites and promoting "lesser-known and less-visited" parks close to urban areas, such as Thousand Islands and La Mauricie National Parks. In anticipation of a 2017 visitor boost, said Fay, "we are encouraging shoulder-season visitation and promoting less-frequented and less-sensitive areas of our parks."
     
    In an interview, Aldag called it a "best-case scenario" if Canadians embrace the free, Canada 150 access and rush to national parks.
     
     
    "The vast majority of parks are under-utilized," he said.
     
    "But when you do have crowding conditions, it impacts the entire visitor experience and it can have ecological or cultural integrity impacts."
     
    First-time visitors to the most popular parks just need to be prepared for peak-season crowds, he said.
     
    "In some ways it's managing visitor expectations."
     
    The free access next year should give a huge boost to the profile of the national parks, which is good, as long as Parks Canada is prepared for the influx.
     
    The key, said Aldag, is for park staff not to find themselves on July 1, 2017 saying "wow, we've had really good response to this program. Now what do we do?"

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Small Towns Struggling With Policing Costs, Forcing Tax Hikes

    Small Towns Struggling With Policing Costs, Forcing Tax Hikes
    Smaller communities across the country have been grappling with what they view as an ever-increasing tax bite for policing they can barely afford.

    Small Towns Struggling With Policing Costs, Forcing Tax Hikes

    'It'll Take Forever:' Gay Hutterite On Possibility Of Being Accepted

    'It'll Take Forever:' Gay Hutterite On Possibility Of Being Accepted
    The 23-year-old photographer's story has been recorded in a short documentary film "Queer Hutterite" which is available on Telus Optik TV on Demand and Telus Optik Local online.

    'It'll Take Forever:' Gay Hutterite On Possibility Of Being Accepted

    Justin Trudeau Promotes Wide-open Liberal Party, No More Membership Privileges

    Justin Trudeau Promotes Wide-open Liberal Party, No More Membership Privileges
    Justin Trudeau is pushing a proposed new constitution for the Liberal Party of Canada aimed at transforming the federal party from an exclusive club into a wide-open political movement.

    Justin Trudeau Promotes Wide-open Liberal Party, No More Membership Privileges

    Saskatchewan Voters Head To The Polls After Lacklustre 27-Day Campaign

    Saskatchewan Voters Head To The Polls After Lacklustre 27-Day Campaign
    The Weyburn firm, Valleyview Petroleums Ltd., has been forced to lay off workers with a lot of experience.

    Saskatchewan Voters Head To The Polls After Lacklustre 27-Day Campaign

    It's Holi Time in Vancouver!!

    It's Holi Time in Vancouver!!
    The Gujarati Society of BC presents a Holi mela like never before. Tomorrow, 12pm at St. George's School, Vancouver 3851 W. 29th Ave. Entry from Wallace Street. 

    It's Holi Time in Vancouver!!

    Toronto-Area Sikh Man Viciously Assaulted In Quebec City, PM Trudeau Condemns ‘Hateful Act’

    Toronto-Area Sikh Man Viciously Assaulted In Quebec City, PM Trudeau Condemns ‘Hateful Act’
    Supninder Singh Khehra, an Indo-Canadian citizen from Patiala and a resident of the Toronto suburb of Brampton, was verbally abused and beaten

    Toronto-Area Sikh Man Viciously Assaulted In Quebec City, PM Trudeau Condemns ‘Hateful Act’