Montreal Gazette

Promises made for national parks

- BoB WeBer

OTTAWA • 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 unequivoca­lly reaffirm that the maintenanc­e or restoratio­n of ecological integrity, through the protection of natural resources and natural processes, will be the first priority when considerin­g all aspects of the management of national parks,” said Catherine McKenna in her response to the Let’s Talk Parks consultati­on, held January 2017.

That response, released Monday in Ottawa, 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, policies and approval policies on 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.

It says the Liberals will rebuild Parks Canada’s science capacity, severely curtailed after budget cuts 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 also commits to greater involvemen­t of Indigenous people, as well as a complete revision of the national parks system plan by 2020.

 ?? SEAN KILPATRICK / CP ?? Environmen­t Minister Catherine McKenna, right, has responded to a massive public consultati­on on national parks.
SEAN KILPATRICK / CP Environmen­t Minister Catherine McKenna, right, has responded to a massive public consultati­on on national parks.

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