The Hamilton Spectator

Pinery Provincial Park closed ‘until further notice’

Decision made to close park due to notice of land claim blockade

- PETER CAMERON

An Ontario provincial park on Lake Huron has been closed to the public after demonstrat­ors set up a trailer at the front gate in support of what police said was a land claim.

The trailer was parked at the entrance to Pinery Provincial Park, located on the shores of Lake Huron, and a few people were peacefully demonstrat­ing, provincial police said Friday morning.

OPP Sgt. Dave Rektor said the demonstrat­ion was related to a “land claims issue that is before the courts.”

The park has been the site of land claim protests in the past. It is also not far from Camp Ipperwash, where a land claim demonstrat­ion turned deadly in 1995.

Park officials issued a statement Thursday saying a decision was made to close the park “until further notice” after the Ministry of Natural Resources and Forestry received notice of intention to blockade the park.

“Ontario Parks will continue talks with the individual­s in an effort to resolve the matter,” the park statement said, noting that until then, the park is closed to the public for camping and day use.

“Public safety remains our first priority and will guide our operation of the park,” the statement added.

A spokespers­on for the Ministry of Natural Resources said the situation involves a few individual­s, not a specific group.

“We have had numerous discussion­s with the individual­s since mid-October,” Karen Passmore said Friday. “The individual­s claim Pinery Provincial Park is rightfully theirs, however no documentat­ion has been shared which provides a foundation for this claim.”

Rektor said a police liaison team would be working with all involved to resolve the issue.

“We respect everybody’s right to demonstrat­e, we just ask everybody remains respectful,” he said, noting that police were keeping an eye on the situation.

The park near Grand Bend, Ont., boasts about 10 kilometres of sand beach along Lake Huron and 21 square kilometres of forests and rolling dunes.

An Aboriginal family led by demonstrat­or Maynard T. George has made several attempts to “repossess” Pinery Provincial Park in past years, saying the land belongs to approximat­ely 100 of his great-grandfathe­r’s descendant­s.

In 2004, then Ontario attorney general Michael Bryant told the legislatur­e that George’s claim was “an individual grievance” and not a land claim.

Bryant noted that the First Nations in the area — Kettle and Stony Point First Nation — had said that they didn’t endorse the grievance and that they have no land claim at Pinery.

Pinery Park is near Camp Ipperwash, where a land claim demonstrat­ion turned deadly in 1995 when a police sniper killed Dudley George — no relation to Maynard George — in a raid on the protesters’ camp.

The Chippewas of Kettle and Stony Point First Nation approved the deal with the federal government in 2015 to settle that claim.

 ?? DAVE CHIDLEY, THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? MPP Monte McNaughton, left, and John Fraser walk from the entrance to Pinery Provincial Park near Grand Bend on Friday.
DAVE CHIDLEY, THE CANADIAN PRESS MPP Monte McNaughton, left, and John Fraser walk from the entrance to Pinery Provincial Park near Grand Bend on Friday.

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