Global geopark promises ‘potential’
Niagara’s tourism potential should not be limited to Niagara Falls.
And an initiative launched about five years ago by Geospatial Niagara should help the region boost its potential for drawing visitors to some of the more remote attractions the peninsula has to offer.
Niagara Community Observatory research co-ordinator Carol Phillips presented a new policy brief Thursday morning that focuses on the potential that developing a UNESCO Global Geopark could hold for Niagara — such as bringing more tourists to the area and giving them reasons to stay longer.
Phillips said a proposed geopark, to be called Ohnia:kara, would encompass the entire Niagara Region and highlight at least 78 attractions in all 12 local municipalities — “from Beamer Falls in Grimsby to Niagara Falls, from the Wainfleet Bog and Welland Canal, all the way on down.”
For a tourism-focused region such as Niagara, she said being designated a UNESCO Global Geopark “is a way to advertise to potential visitors that this is a geography that you need to see and experience, and that includes everything from its geology through to its cultural history and its economic character.”
She said there were 12.9 mil-
lion person visits to Niagara in 2017, of which 8.4 million were visitors from elsewhere in the province, and those visitors spent $2.36 billion during their stays.
“But less than half of those visitors stayed overnight, and of those who did the bulk of them only stay one night, maybe two,” Phillips said.
A geopark designation, she added, will help promote Niagara “as more than just the day trip.”
Phillips stressed that there is no regulatory limitations associated with the UNESCO designation that would further limit land use planning in the region.
The initiative was first proposed about five years ago by Geospatial Niagara founder Darren Platakis, who first learned about a geopark in southern New Brunswick called Stonehammer.
“When I stumbled upon the Stonehammer geopark site, all I saw was potential and opportunity,” Platakis said.
He said the initiative is “all about creating those opportunities and living up to the potential that Niagara has, globally — beyond Niagara Falls and Niagara-on-the-Lake.”
“We have such a wealth of sites to see, opportunities,” he added.
Platakis said the initiative holds a great deal of educational potential, too.
Geospatial Niagara secretary Ian Lucas said funding will be needed to continue moving the project forward.
“We have lofty goals and realistic expenses,” he said, responding to a question from an audience of about 40 people.
“We will be coming to the point very soon where we will be actually coming out and saying, here’s our ask. This is what we would like in terms of financial support, idea support, in-kind support.”
Phillips said a formal expression of interest has been submitted to the Canadian National Committee for Geoparks, allowing Ohnia:kara to officially be identified as an aspiring geopark.