Lethbridge Herald

Alberta gov’t says no parks will close after partnershi­ps found

- Bob Weber THE CANADIAN PRESS — EDMONTON

The Alberta government says it won’t be closing any provincial parks, whether it can find someone to run them or not.

“I am grateful for the hard work of our parks partners and look forward to keeping our parks system sustainabl­e for future generation­s,” says a release Tuesday from Environmen­t Minister Jason Nixon.

Opposition NDP environmen­t critic Marlin Schmidt called it a climbdown by a United

Conservati­ve government facing too much resistance to an unpopular policy.

“It’s clear that the government was forced to buckle under the public pressure it faced,” he said.

Nixon announced in March that the government planned to fully or partially close 20 provincial parks and hand off another 164 to thirdparty managers. Sites for which no managers could be found would lose park status and revert to general Crown land.

The plan was intensely controvers­ial from the start.

Tens of thousands of letters were written to government members and lawn signs saying “Defend Alberta Parks” began popping up in neighbourh­oods around the province.

Nixon maintained the current park system was unaffordab­le, but was unable to say how much money the changes would save.

Then, freedom of informatio­n documents surfaced that showed Nixon had ignored advice from his own staff to begin public consultati­ons. Those documents also suggested that partnershi­ps cost the government more, not less.

Tuesday’s release says: “Alberta’s government has secured or maintained partnershi­ps for 170 parks and public recreation area sites across the province.”

Later, it refers to reaching deals for “more than a dozen” sites.

“In the coming months, Alberta Environmen­t and Parks expects to continue working with interested organizati­ons through the longstandi­ng operationa­l partnershi­ps system.”

The release says no sites will be delisted. All will remain open and retain their current designatio­ns and associated protection­s.

Nobody from the Alberta government was immediatel­y available to comment.

“This is a significan­t victory for the tens of thousands of Albertans that raised their voices,” said Schmidt.

He said he still has significan­t questions over the terms of the deals that have been reached.

“This government has done a lot to lose the trust of Albertans,” Schmidt said.

Katie Morrison of the Canadian Parks and Wilderness Society said she’s looking for confirmati­on that the partnershi­p deals will ensure the parks are run sustainabl­y with conservati­on as their main objective. She also wants to see some definitive numbers from the province.

Still, she called it a win that the parks will maintain their current protection­s.

“It is a win that the policy that was announced is not going forward. Albertans should be proud that they have stood up for their parks.”

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