The recent announcement that nine parks
in Northern Ontario will be closed for camping has struck a nerve.
Within days of the early October announcement, a groundswell of
opposition has been brewing across the Northeast, where eight of the
parks are located.
The nine Northern parks include;
Caliper (Nestor Falls), Fushimi Lake (Hearst), Greenwater (Cochrane),
Ivanhoe Lake (Foleyet), Mississagi (Elliot Lake), Obatanga (north of
Wawa), Rene Brunelle (Kapuskasing), The Shoals (west of Chapleau) and
Tidewater (Moosonee). Springhurst in Midhurst is also closed for
camping.
A Facebook page, Friends of Ivanhoe Lake Provincial Park, has been established and a blockade at Rene
Brunelle Provincial Park was held. The Federation of Northern Ontario Municipalities (FONOM) has facilitated public meetings in Hearst,
Timmins and Cochrane.
“The level of frustration is
plausible,” said FONOM President Al Spacek. “It's the average,
hard-working family person who is very upset. Their lifestyle is
being threatened and it has been repeated to me many times that they
are fed up and not going to take it any more. The government has
misjudged what they are doing.”
Spacek held a meeting with Minister of
Natural Resources Michael Gravelle Oct. 18 and submitted a report
compiled from the public meetings and former ministry employees.
“We pointed out to the minister that
many of these parks can be operated at low cost, and in some cases at
break even or a profit,” Spacek said. “Not all of them but some.”
Following the meeting, Spacek said he
was optimistic and asked for a short turn around for a response.
Gravelle said he would respond in a few weeks.
In announcing the changes at the parks,
the ministry stated in a press release that the parks had very low
visitation rates. However, other parks not slated for a change in
designation had lower July-August occupancy rates, especially in the
northwest, than some of those that will be closed for camping.
According to 2011 and 2010 statistics,
published by the ministry, three parks closed for camping –
Fushimi, Ivanhoe Lake and Rene Brunelle – were at occupancy rates
(respectively) in 2011 at 62 per cent, 55 per cent and 45 per cent.
These rates had all increased from the previous year.
Some parks in the northwest continuing
to offer camping had lower July-August occupancy rates and were
showing decreases in 2011. These included Pancake Bay (43 per cent),
White Lake (31 per cent), Sioux Narrows (27 per cent) Lake Superior
(52 per cent). Others in that region remaining stable showed rates
ranging from 45 to 42 per cent.
In the Northeast, Kap-Kig-Iwan in
Englehart had a four per cent July-August occupancy rate last year
while Missinaibi, between Hearst and Chapleau, had 29 per cent. Both
still offer camping.
The announcement means there will not
be provincial park camping on the Trans Canada Highway for a distance
of about 750 kilometres between Temagami and Greenstone.
Malcolm MacDonald, a spokesperson for
the Friends of Ivanhoe Lake group, said the announcement came as
quite a shock and without consultation.
“It was a complete surprise about
Ivanhoe since it is one of the last parks I would have thought of to
be closed in this area,” he said. “Especially since it is so
close to Timmins, which is the biggest population centre north of
Sudbury and it is central enough to service Chapleau, Cochrane and
Kapuskasing.”
MacDonald, a former ministry supervisor
in the northeast, has been a seasonal camper at Ivanhoe for the past
14 years.
“The biggest issue they (MNR) keep
coming back with is capital costs in the future,” MacDonald said.
“But they need to look at where they
spend the money and when.”
Ivanhoe needs a new water system at a
cost of about $500,000, but the ministry continues to build
“wonderful and fantastic comfort stations” that include heated
floors in showers.
“Is it more important to have warm
feet or safe drinking water?” he asked.
Spacek said closing the parks will only
save about $1 million operationally, and the government's “nickel
and diming” is in stark contrast to what it has spent to relocate
two power plants.
“The Drummond Report warned against
nickel and diming and the (Northern Ontario) Growth Plan includes
tourism as part of our economic development. So what kind of message
are we sending,” he said.
Seasonal campsites are in demand, but
provincial park policy dictates that no more than 25 per cent of the
sites can be set aside for that use.
“In many parks there is a waiting
list of two to one for seasonal spots but the policy is inhibiting
the profitability side,” Spacek said. “Why not go where the
demand and money is? Do they want revenue or park policy?”
The parks will remain open for day use
but MacDonald said he doubts people will drive to spend a few hours
at a park.
“We can walk out our back door and
have day use,” he said.