Lethbridge Herald

REPORT on parks

ECOLOGICAL INTEGRITY TO BE TOP PRIORITY FOR PARKS CANADA: MINISTER

- THE CANADIAN PRESS — OTTAWA

Protecting and conserving the natural environmen­t is Parks Canada’s main job, the federal environmen­t minister concludes in response to public consultati­on on the future of Canada's national parks

Protecting and conserving the natural environmen­t is Parks Canada’s main job, the federal environmen­t minister concludes in her response to a massive public consultati­on on the future of Canada’s national parks.

“I did feel there needed to be a reset button,” Catherine McKenna said Monday about her response to the Let’s Talk Parks consultati­on, held January 2017. “I thought it was really important to make that signal.”

That response acknowledg­es that commercial developmen­ts — especially in the heavily pressured Rocky Mountain parks of Banff and Jasper — may have to be reviewed.

“Maintainin­g and restoring ecological integrity requires limits on developmen­t in national parks, particular­ly those where developmen­t can impact ecosystem health,” McKenna said in the report.

She said an independen­t working group will be struck to examine Parks Canada’s practices and approval policies for developmen­t. That group is to report back by the end of August.

The report also acknowledg­es how important the parks are for tourism, noting that they support the equivalent of 40,000 full-time jobs across the country.

Let’s Talk Parks Canada was the largest public consultati­on the agency has ever held. More than 13,000 people and organizati­ons participat­ed either in person at public meetings, through online surveys or via email submission­s or social media.

The response makes a series of further promises.

McKenna said her government will restore Parks Canada’s science capacity, at least to the level it was at before its budget was curtailed in 2012. It promises greater transparen­cy, with assessment­s of individual parks conducted every five years and released publicly.

The document also promises to “finalize the creation of currently proposed national parks and national marine conservati­on areas,” although it doesn’t provide a timeline. It commits to greater involvemen­t of Indigenous people, as well as a complete revision of the national parks system plan by 2020. It also pledges a higher standard of environmen­tal review for developmen­ts in parks.

“There are cases where we could just be making sure that we’re doing a really good job, looking at the impacts on parks, on ecological integrity, on species at risk as we make major investment­s in infrastruc­ture,” McKenna said.

She singled out a proposed bike path between Jasper and Banff along the Icefields Parkway as one plan she’ll be examining.

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