Calgary Herald

Off-highway vehicle trails threaten plans for parks: study

- BOB WEBER

A government study warns that off-highway vehicles have become the main source of human impact in a large park planned for Alberta’s southern Rocky Mountain foothills, and threaten the area’s fragile environmen­t.

The NDP government is deciding what will be allowed in Castle Wildland Provincial Park and Castle Provincial Park, a vast area covering 1,000 square kilometres of mountains and valleys that are home to 180 species of plants and animals considered endangered or threatened.

“While the footprints of historical disturbanc­es from forestry and other industrial activities are a significan­t part of the landscape of the Castle region, (trails) used primarily for recreation have been a dominant feature of land use in recent years,” the study concludes.

The report released late last month by the province’s environmen­tal monitoring department draws on more than 150 peer-reviewed scientific studies.

It finds uncertaint­ies remain, but details strong evidence of heavy and growing off-highway vehicle use in the area along with related impacts.

It lists at least 1,700 kilometres of trails, which far outstrip logging or energy roads. The region averages a trail density at least twice as high as other Alberta provincial and national parks.

The study found more than 1,600 crossings of streams, almost all of which are headwaters for rivers. Some streams have up to 10 crossings per kilometre, few of them bridged. It also notes that most human-caused grizzly deaths in Alberta and British Columbia happen within 500 metres of a road or 200 metres of a trail. Trail density in the parks already exceeds the level at which grizzly population­s decline, it says.

Stream crossings, which increase sediment in water, damage trout spawning. The report quotes a Colorado study that found three times as much sediment in streams crossed by off-highway vehicles as in forestry road crossings.

The report notes that trails and roads increase soil erosion and compaction, reduce plant cover and biodiversi­ty, change the species mix and cut up habitat.

Gary Clark, president of a local off-highway vehicle users group, called the report a foregone conclusion. “It seems to me they’re trying their hardest to legitimize their decision on what’s happening here,” he said Wednesday.

Clark said banning the vehicles won’t change the fact that the trails exist. Vehicle owners have spent thousands of dollars upgrading and maintainin­g trails, he added.

The Castle landscape supports forestry, oil and gas, and agricultur­e, as well as skiing, hiking and horseback riding. It is also a popular off-highway vehicle destinatio­n.

In their draft management plans for the parks, the New Democrats have proposed banning motorized recreation.

Scientific consensus remains against such vehicles. Last spring, 57 scientists sent an open letter to Alberta Environmen­t Minister Shannon Phillips urging the province to stand by a ban.

Pat Stier, who represents the area as a legislatur­e member for the Opposition United Conservati­ves, said off-highway vehicles have a long history in the area and some trails for them should remain. “We’ve always been advocating to find a balanced approach and that would include more enforcemen­t and more administra­tion,” he said. “We think there’s still an opportunit­y to work with these groups.”

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