Tuesday, July 7, 2026
ADVT 
National

Unreleased Report Has Concerns About Ski Development In Jasper National Park

The Canadian Press, 21 Jul, 2015 12:30 PM
    Parks Canada has opened the door to ski hill expansion at one of its Rocky Mountain national parks despite its own research suggesting that further development would threaten a nearby caribou herd.
     
    A report on the Marmot Basin ski area in Jasper National Park was completed more than a year ago, but was never made public. Lead author Fiona Schmiegelow decided this month she would release the report herself to anyone who asked.
     
    "I didn't want to say to people, 'No, I can't discuss this work,'" said Schmiegelow, a University of Alberta biologist. "I felt it was time for the work to be made public."
     
    Schmiegelow was contracted by former Jasper conservation manager John Wilmshurst and the ski hill's operators to study possible effects of expansion on the Tonquin caribou. The herd, under federal protection as a threatened species, lives in the park next to the resort and has seen its numbers drop to fewer than 50 animals from 111 in 2006.
     
    Parks Canada is updating guidelines for ski hills in national parks. In an effort to cap commercial growth, resort operators have been asked to list projects they may at some point propose.
     
    Marmot Basin has suggested returning some land to the park, while increasing ski runs and trails on unused areas. Parks Canada agreed in June 2014 that the ideas would be considered. The ski hill has not yet tabled any formal proposal.
     
    Three months before the resort and the federal agency reached their agreement, Schmiegelow had concluded that not only would Marmot's plans damage important caribou calving habitat, some of Parks Canada's own planned trails and roads would be part of the problem.
     
    "These are additional pressures on a population that already seems to be struggling," Schmiegelow said. "If the primary mandate of the park is maintenance of ecological integrity, if conservation takes priority, we don't want to be doing anything that exacerbates the present condition."
     
    Schmiegelow said she was warned the release of her report could be delayed as Parks Canada developed a response.
     
    Six months turned to eight, then a year. Finally, when Wilmshurt was abruptly fired last June, Schmiegelow decided to act.
     
    "That was the catalyst. I felt (the firing) might precipitate requests for information about the work and I was not prepared to not release it any further."
     
    Jasper's acting conservation manager said the report is likely to be included in an overall package of information on plans for the area to be released this fall. Shawn Cardiff said the report contained "no surprises" for either Parks Canada or Marmot Basin.
     
    Cardiff said no decisions have been made.
     
    "That is the purpose of the report, to help us better understand what the potential implications are of some of the activities in the site guidelines. The ideas in the guidelines around lift development are subject to future decision-making."
     
    There are growing concerns about commercialization in national parks. But Cardiff said guidelines agreed to by Parks Canada and the resort are simply possibilities.
     
    Stephen Woodley, a former Parks Canada chief scientist, said Schmiegelow's research should be guiding development considerations, not commercial interests. Woodley was also critical of a similar agreement between Parks Canada and the Lake Louise ski area in Banff National Park.
     
    "Caribou are in free fall throughout the mountain parks," he said. "We can't just keep chipping away.
     
    "You have to take a big picture and Fiona's study does that." 

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Police Investigate Suspicious Packages Mailed To Courts In Atlantic Canada

    Police Investigate Suspicious Packages Mailed To Courts In Atlantic Canada
    ST. JOHN'S, N.L. — Police in Newfoundland say there aren't any known public safety risks as they investigate suspicious packages after courts and other buildings were cleared as a precaution.

    Police Investigate Suspicious Packages Mailed To Courts In Atlantic Canada

    NDP Win In Alberta Could Offer Momentum For Party In Other Parts Of Country

    NDP Win In Alberta Could Offer Momentum For Party In Other Parts Of Country
    WINNIPEG — A political scientists says the NDP election victory in Alberta could boost fortunes for the New Democrats in other provinces and federally at a time when the party could use some momentum.

    NDP Win In Alberta Could Offer Momentum For Party In Other Parts Of Country

    Canadian Gets Military Burial In The Netherlands 70 Years After WWII Deaths

    Canadian Gets Military Burial In The Netherlands 70 Years After WWII Deaths
    BERGEN-OP-ZOOM, Netherlands — A Canadian soldier has found a final resting place 70 years after he was killed during the Second World War.

    Canadian Gets Military Burial In The Netherlands 70 Years After WWII Deaths

    Flaming Lips, The Roots To Perform Free Shows In Toronto During Pan Am Games

    Flaming Lips, The Roots To Perform Free Shows In Toronto During Pan Am Games
    TORONTO — Psych-rock outfit the Flaming Lips and long-running alt-hip-hop band the Roots will perform free public shows during the Pan Am Games in Toronto this summer.

    Flaming Lips, The Roots To Perform Free Shows In Toronto During Pan Am Games

    Best Buy To Offer Use Of Its Stores, Website To Other Canadian Retailers

    Best Buy To Offer Use Of Its Stores, Website To Other Canadian Retailers
    BURNABY, B.C. — Best Buy says it's preparing to offer other retailers the chance to sell their products on its website and allow their customers to pick up their merchandise at its 192 Canadian stores.

    Best Buy To Offer Use Of Its Stores, Website To Other Canadian Retailers

    Union Says 120 Layoffs At B.C.'s Mount Polley Mine Leaves 'Skeleton Crew'

    Union Says 120 Layoffs At B.C.'s Mount Polley Mine Leaves 'Skeleton Crew'
    LIKELY, B.C. — The union representing workers at a British Columbia mine hit by a tailings pond breach says continued layoffs have left a skeleton crew as the facility prepares for a potential restart.

    Union Says 120 Layoffs At B.C.'s Mount Polley Mine Leaves 'Skeleton Crew'