The Welland Tribune

National parks program soon to end, but kids will still get in free in 2018

- MIA RABSON

OTTAWA — The party is nearly over: The free admission to national parks and heritage sites that accompanie­d Canada’s 150th birthday bash will come to an end Dec. 31.

Earlier this year, Environmen­t Minister Catherine McKenna was considerin­g whether to extend the free admission to parks and heritage sites because the program had proven so popular.

But McKenna now says the admission fees will return for adults as of Jan. 1, although she is following through on plans to make national parks free for kids starting in 2018.

The free parks program helped push attendance at national parks up 12 per cent in the first seven months of the year, with some parks so busy they had to close their gates temporaril­y on occasion.

More than 14 million people took a trip to a national park or heritage site between Jan. 1 and July 31, up from about 12.5 million in the same period in 2016.

In July, some parks saw almost twice as many monthly visitors as the previous summer, such as Point Pelee National Park in southweste­rn Ontario, where July visits were 90 per cent higher than the same month in 2016.

Canada budgeted about $ 76 million on the free parks program, including lost gate revenues, addressing increases in visitors and distributi­ng free discovery passes.

Parks Canada runs 47 national parks and 170 national heritage sites, in every province and territory.

A one- year family pass, good for up to seven people in a single vehicle to visit more than 80 national parks and heritage sites, will cost $ 136.40, the same price of the annual Discovery Pass in 2016. A single adult pass will be $ 67.70 and seniors will pay $ 57.90.

Some parks also offer an annual pass just for that park, including Prince Edward Island National Park and Riding Mountain National Park in Manitoba.

Parks also offer individual and group rates for single visits.

 ?? THE CANADIAN PRESS FILES ?? The narrow peninsula at Fish Point on Pelee Island, Ont., which extends for more than a kilometre into Lake Erie, is seen above on Aug. 21, 2009. The free admission to national parks and heritage sites that came as part of Canada’s 150th birthday bash...
THE CANADIAN PRESS FILES The narrow peninsula at Fish Point on Pelee Island, Ont., which extends for more than a kilometre into Lake Erie, is seen above on Aug. 21, 2009. The free admission to national parks and heritage sites that came as part of Canada’s 150th birthday bash...

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