Waterloo Region Record

Bruce Peninsula National Park set to grow

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TORONTO — Parks Canada says it has reached an agreement to acquire a privately owned parcel of land in Ontario’s Georgian Bay area to expand the Bruce Peninsula National Park.

The 1,324-hectare property called Driftwood Cove includes 6.5 kilometres of uninterrup­ted shoreline and is home to at least 10 federally listed species at risk and dozens of ecological­ly, geological­ly and culturally significan­t cave systems, the agency said.

“This is an example of our commitment to making sure that we do right by the environmen­t,” federal Environmen­t Minister Catherine McKenna told a news conference in Toronto.

“Canadians value our land, we value our animals and we need to take action.”

The funds for the purchase of the cove are coming from the 2018 federal budget, which included $1.3 billion to protect nature, parks, and wild spaces, McKenna said Wednesday.

Canada has internatio­nal commitment­s to conserve at least 17 per cent of its land and freshwater by 2020. So far, only 10.5 per cent is protected.

The property was publicly listed for $20.6 million, but Parks Canada said the final purchase price will not be made public until the transactio­n has been completed.

McKenna said the Bruce Trail Conservanc­y also made a significan­t financial contributi­on toward the purchase as a portion of the famous Bruce Trail runs through the property.

Parks Canada said the acquired land forms a significan­t part of the UNESCO Niagara Escarpment Biosphere Reserve. Since the establishm­ent of the national park in 1987, Parks Canada has added 140 areas of land to it.

The minister said the addition of the Driftwood Cove property to the national park is a reason for Canadians to connect with nature.

“We want you to get out in our national parks, connect with our national parks, because we know then that you will protect them,” she said, adding that the land needs to be preserved and kept pristine for future generation­s to enjoy.

The number of people visiting Bruce Peninsula National Park has doubled in the last decade, rising to more than 400,000 last year, McKenna said.

According to Parks Canada statistics, park attendance across the country is up 20 per cent in the 2017-18 period, compared to 2016-17.

More than six million Canadians visited national parks in 2017-18. All parks were free to attend last year for Canada’s 150th birthday celebratio­ns.

At the end of last year, the federal government announced that all parks would be free to those 17 and under and for new Canadian citizens who qualify.

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