Lethbridge Herald

National parks attendance falters

- Mia Rabson THE CANADIAN PRESS — OTTAWA

If you make it free, they will come.

Parks Canada’s free entry program for the country’s 150th birthday saw Canadians and other visitors flock to national parks and historic sites in record numbers. An extra 2.5 million visitors poured through the gates in 2017.

In the first eight months of 2018, the number of visitors fell 10 per cent from the same period in 2017. In some parks that saw the biggest jumps in 2017, visits are down more than 30 per cent.

“We expected we would see a big increase in visitation in 2017,” said Ed Jager, director of visitor experience for Parks Canada. “We also knew that we would see sort of a return to the previous trend.”

Jager said Parks Canada’s chief social scientist — Parks Canada has a chief social scientist, and an economist, and data analysts — predicted exactly what the free admissions in 2017 would do to visitor numbers.

He said the good news is that the 2018 numbers are still higher than in the previous years when there were fees, reflecting ongoing marketing efforts to keep visitor numbers growing.

Entry is still free for anyone under 18, which it didn’t used to be, but adults once again pay between $3.60 and $9.80 for day passes to different parks.

The number of visitors to national parks between January and August was up about three per cent compared to 2016. Visits to historic sites are about even, though final numbers could change because some visits, such as by tour groups, might not all be accounted for yet.

Kathleen Yetman, owner of Birdie’s Perch restaurant and the Point Pelee Trading Post, said her business had never seen anything quite like what happened in 2017. “It was a gift,” she said. Yetman’s place is just outside the entry gates to Point Pelee National Park, billed as the southernmo­st point of Canada and a birdwatche­r’s paradise. It saw the biggest increase in visitors of any park, with 217,229 additional visitors in 2017 compared with the year before. The number of visitors in July and August was double the previous year’s.

Yetman said the crash in 2018 was expected but she said things were still busier this year than in 2016.

“It was still very brisk and I do think 2017 brought people in and that they came back in 2018,” she said.

The number of visitors to Point Pelee fell almost 40 per cent in the first eight months of the year, compared with 2017, but is still about six per cent higher than in 2016.

 ?? Canadian Press photo ?? Pedestrian­s cross the street in Banff National Park in this July 2017 file photo.
Canadian Press photo Pedestrian­s cross the street in Banff National Park in this July 2017 file photo.

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