[an error occurred while processing this directive] FactsCanada.ca -- Friday Feature 2001-03Fr -- Provincial Parks
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Provincial Parks.

January 19, 2001.

I apologise for the tardiness of today's issue. It was due to factors that were beyond my control. Hopefully Sunday's issue will be out on time. Thanks for your patience.


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Provincial Parks
Compiled by John MacDonald (john@factscanada.ca)


Provincial parks are areas of land and water, they can be large or small, natural or man-modified, and are designated by any of the provincial governments for the purposes of nature protection, recreation, tourism, historic preservation or education. They range in character from Polar Bear Provincial Park on Hudson Bay, a 24 087-square-kilometre wilderness park visited by less than 500 people each year, to Bronte Creek Provincial Park, a 6.4 square kilometre recreation park near Toronto which received 302 327 visitors in 1994.


History

As in the case of national parks, provincial parks originated at the end of the 19th century as a result of growing concern among civil servants, politicians and the general public about the depletion of natural resources, the degradation of scenic places and the need for an ever-expanding and increasingly urbanized population to have opportunities for recreation in a natural setting.

The first provincial park, Queen Victoria Park at Niagara Falls, was established in 1885. Algonquin, established in 1893, was the first Canadian provincial park established to protect a natural environment. The idea for such a park was conceived in 1885 by an Irish immigrant, Alexander Kirkwood. As a clerk of the Crown Lands Department, he had become concerned about the destruction of the northern forests and wildlife and was impressed by the new National Parks at Yellowstone in the US and Banff in the Canadian Rockies.

Kirkwood advocated the creation of a National Forest and Park called Algonkin to "perpetuate the name of one of the greatest Indian nations that has inhabited the North American continent." His enthusiasm and the practical support of a provincial land surveyor, James Dickson, led to the appointment of a royal commission and to the investigation of 18 townships in the District of Nipissing, south of the Mattawa River and lying between the Ottawa River and Georgian Bay. In 1893 this area, Algonquin, was declared "a public park and forest reservation, fish and game preserve, health resort and pleasure ground for the benefit, advantage and enjoyment of the people of the Province."

Initially the park was a remote wilderness, still subject to lumbering but afforded improved fire and wildlife protection. However, as communications improved and accommodation was provided, its recreational function gained in importance and, in the early 1900s, it became a fashionable destination for tourists wishing to canoe, fish and camp in a wilderness setting.

The next provincial park, Rondeau, comprising a peninsula on the north coast of Lake Erie, was declared in 1894. Featuring a Carolinian Forest of species normally found farther south, and frequented by numerous migratory birds, it was already popular with duck hunters and picnickers. Over the next 50 years, as demands for conservation and recreation areas increased, five other provincial parks were established in Ontario. In the granite shield and Boreal Forest, Quetico was created in 1913 and Lake Superior in 1944. Along the Great Lakes shoreline, Long Point was designated in 1921, Presqu'ile in 1922, Ipperwash in 1938 and Sibley (now Sleeping Giant) in 1944.

Quebec's first provincial parks were created contemporaneously to those in Ontario and for similar reasons. In 1895 the Laurentides north of Quebec City and Mont-Tremblant north of Montreal were created to protect the forests, fish and wildlife for public benefit; however, resource exploitation continued in these areas. Other provincial parks were designated in the 1930s: Gaspesie in 1937, Mont-Orford in 1938 and La Verendrye in 1939. In the last 30 years many smaller parks have been established near cities to meet the demand for recreation in a natural setting.

British Columbia was the first western province to create provincial parks. Strathcona, a mountain and lake area on Vancouver Island, gained park status in 1911 as a result of public support from such groups as the Alpine Club of Canada, the BC Natural History Society and the Vancouver Island Board of Trade. Attention then focused on the mountains and glaciers of eastern BC, Mount Robson being declared a provincial park in 1913, followed by Garibaldi in 1920 and Mount Assiniboine and Kokanee Glacier in 1922.

The province's largest park, the 9810 square kilometre Tweedsmuir, located in the Coast Range, gained park status in 1938; Wells Gray, in 1939. In more recent years many more provincial parks, including large wilderness areas and small recreational sites, have been designated near cities in the south, as well as in the north.

Provincial status and ownership of resources came later to the Prairie provinces, and so did provincial parks. While the federal government designated national parks and forest reserves in the prairies, it was only with the transfer of resources legislation in 1930 that provincial parks, often originally forest reserves, were created. Alberta passed a Provincial Parks and Protected Areas Act in 1930; two years later, Aspen Beach, Park Lake, Gooseberry Lake, Saskatoon Island, Sylvan Lake, Lundbreck Falls, Ghost River and Hommy were declared provincial parks. The last three were later deleted from the park system but, after jurisdictional changes in 1951 and 1967, more and larger parks were created. By 1972 Alberta had 51 parks totalling 567 square kilometres.

Saskatchewan's first three provincial parks were created in 1931 from the former forest reserves of Duck Mountain, Cypress Hills and Moose Mountain. Manitoba likewise took over the management of forest reserves such as Turtle Mountain and Spruce Woods but the province's first provincial park, Whiteshell, was only established in 1961.

The Atlantic provinces began establishing provincial parks in the 1950s, when recreation opportunities in natural areas relatively close to cities were increasingly in demand. Parks with both a recreational and nature conservation orientation have now been established but the number and area remains relatively small. Territorial parks in the Yukon and the Northwest Territories are an even more recent innovation, primarily because most land in the territories is federally owned, recreation demand has been very limited (because of the small population and low levels of seasonal tourism), and because unspoiled wilderness is generally quite abundant.


Today

Today, over 100 years after the first provincial park was established, all provinces have provincial park systems which usually consist of provincial parks and various other land units designated for recreational and nature conservation purposes. Each provincial system is different, and new parks are being designated each year.

British Columbia, in 1996, had 443 provincial parks, 131 ecological reserves and one wilderness area, totalling 78 000 square kilometres. Parks range from large, remote wild areas such as Tweedsmuir, to marine parks and small, recreational parks near cities. The provincial parks are divided into three classes: class "A" comprises 391 fully protected natural or historic parks in which no commercially extractive industrial uses are permitted; discreet and regulated resource extraction is allowed in the two class "B" parks; the 21 class "C" parks are small, local, primarily recreational in character and, in time, will be transferred to local government jurisdiction. In 1995 the BC provincial park system received 24.6 million visitors.

Alberta, in 1996, had 67 provincial parks, three wilderness areas, over 300 recreation areas, and 14 ecological reserves, together encompassing over 10 000 square kilometres. They range in character from large, lightly used, unspoiled wilderness areas in the Rockies (e.g., Siffleur) to heavily used, water-based recreational parks in the more populated areas of central and eastern Alberta (e.g., Sylvan Lake). In addition there are preserved areas such as bison jumps, fossil beds, native rock art and other sites of historical significance (e.g., Dinosaur Provincial Park). In 1996 Alberta's provincial park system received approximately nine million visitors.

Saskatchewan, in 1995, had 34 provincial parks with a total area of 11 483 square kilometres and 150 recreation sites comprising 422 square kilometres. There are four classes of provincial parks: historic (of which there are nine, covering 274 hectares), recreation (ten, covering 147 square kilometres), natural environment (11, covering 6775 square kilometres) and wilderness (four, encompassing 4559 square kilometres). As well, the parks system includes 22 protected areas and eight historic sites. Saskatchewan also has 101 regional parks. In 1995 Saskatchewan's provincial park system received 2.3 million visitors.

Manitoba, in 1994, had 102 provincial parks covering over 10 000 square kilometres. They are designated as natural, recreational, heritage, wilderness and wayside. Whiteshell, east of Winnipeg, is a natural park, as is Nopiming, a Saulteaux word meaning "into the wilderness". Hecla is a heritage park and Atikaki is the only wilderness park. In 1994 Manitoba's provincial park system received over 3 million visitors.

Ontario, in 1995, had 265 provincial parks encompassing 63 498 square kilometres. Additional lands designated by provincial conservation authorities (1334 square kilometres), wilderness areas (618 square kilometres) and a variety of other areas also serve nature conservation and recreational purposes. The park system includes wilderness areas (e.g., Quetico, 4758 square kilometres), historic sites (e.g., Petroglyphs, 1555 hectares) and intensively used recreational areas (e.g., Wasaga Beach, 15 square kilometres). The provincial parks are categorized as follows: wilderness (of which there are eight, covering 41 392 square kilometres), natural environment (65, covering 11 900 square kilometres), waterway (29, covering 8874 square kilometres), nature reserve, (88, covering 915 square kilometres), recreation (71, covering 396 square kilometres), and historical (four, encompassing 2019 hectares). Since 1983, 132 new parks have been established and several new areas have been proposed as provincial parks. The most significant of these is an 8000-square-kilometre expansion to Wabakimi Provincial Park in northwestern Ontario. In 1994 Ontario's provincial park system received 8.3 million visitors.

Quebec, in 1995, had 17 provincial parks, including three in the process of designation, encompassing 4249 square kilometres; another 18 areas north of the 50th parallel have also been set aside. The system includes large wilderness areas (e.g., Mont-Tremblant, 1490 square kilometres) and smaller areas (e.g., Miguasha, a world-class paleontological site, 62.3 hectares). Since 1977 they have been classified as conservation parks and recreation parks. In 1994 Quebec's provincial parks registered 3.4 million visitor days of use.

New Brunswick had 33 provincial parks in 1995, varying in size from 17 427 hectares (Mount Carleton) to a .2 hectare site and beach parks. In 1996 the system was being downsized, with 12 parks transferred to municipal governments, voluntary, non-profit organizations and the private sector. In 1995 they received nearly 2.5 million visitors.

Nova Scotia had 119 provincial parks in 1995, the operational ones covering 92 square kilometres, and reserve areas covering 190 square kilometres. Primarily oriented to roadside, coastal and urban recreation, they are classified as campgrounds and day use (picnic, beach or roadside rest sites). An estimated 2 million visitors used these parks in 1995.

Prince Edward Island, in 1996, had 30 provincial parks encompassing 17 square kilometres. Almost all of the sites dot the coast and include combinations of recreation, natural environment and historic features. Several carry a second designation under the Natural Areas Protection Act. Annual visitation to the provincial parks was last estimated in 1990 at 500 000.

Newfoundland, in 1996, had 64 provincial parks encompassing 4373 square kilometres. The system comprises 32 regional, 13 natural scenic attractions and three Keystone parks. In 1995, these parks had over 1.8 million visitors. The provincial parks program was expanded in 1986 and now includes the administration of 13 ecological reserves; notably, Seabird sanctuaries, covering 84 square kilometres, and two wilderness reserves covering 3965 square kilometres and two provisional reserves.

The Yukon Territory has two territorial parks: Herschel Island established in 1987 and Coal River springs established as both a territorial park and an ecological reserve in 1990. There are also 41 campgrounds located along the major road network in the territory; and 11 recreational sites at scenic spots along the highways usually featuring interpretive signs or self-guided trails.

The Northwest Territories (including Nunavut) had some 45 territorial parks in 1996, covering 31 square kilometres, and more and larger areas are proposed. They are classified as natural environment recreation, outdoor recreation, community, wayside and historic parks. In addition, there were three wildlife reserves covering 12 321 square kilometres and nine critical wildlife areas covering 140 000 square kilometres.


Administration

Provincial parks are administered by provincial government agencies which are commonly part of departments dealing with natural resources, tourism or culture. For example, Ontario Parks is a special agency of the Ministry of Natural Resources; in BC it belongs to the Ministry of Environment, Lands and Parks. Staff are located in offices in the provincial capitals, in regional offices and in the parks, where a superintendent is normally in charge, assisted by wardens and interpreters.

Most provincial agencies have developed park system plans that guide decisions on how many parks are needed and what characteristics, size and location are appropriate. A management plan is normally prepared for each park to facilitate decisions on the protection of the park environment, on the development of facilities and the provision of services. Given the wide variation in the character and purpose of parks, many agencies classify parks (e.g., as wilderness, recreation or historic) and manage them accordingly. Because parks, especially large ones, are diverse in character and purpose, they are often zoned, some areas being designated for strict nature protection and others for tourism development. The classification and zoning of a park is difficult and may require public involvement.

In trying to protect park environments, yet allow them to serve the needs of visitors, park agencies face many management problems. Few parks are now ecologically self-sufficient; hence, management is needed to deal with fires, wildlife imbalances, diseases of animals and vegetation, and human impacts. The use of parks by visitors necessitates the provision and management of accommodation, transport and recreation facilities, information and education services, and safety features.

Some of the problems facing park managers in recent years include maintaining fish stocks; preventing forest fires, littering and vandalism; protecting visitors from bears; eliminating poaching; reducing crowding in popular areas; dealing with new technologies (e.g., snowmobiles, hang gliders, wind surfers); and reducing accidents from risk activities (e.g., mountaineering, canoeing, winter camping).

In recent years, to improve planning and management, environmental protection and visitor satisfaction, park agencies have undertaken more research and have regularly consulted the public through surveys and public hearings. Increasingly, opportunities are being provided for private enterprise, public interest groups and volunteers to become involved in running parks.


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== PREVIEW ==

On Sunday I profile "The Great One" (and if you don't know who that is, you *really* need to read our newsletters), announce yet another FactsCanada.ca giveaway (associated with "The Great One"), give you a brief update on last week's biography of Jim Carrey, tell you about Biggar, Saskatchewan, give you some of my thoughts on statistics, and tell you what the American CIA thinks of us.


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Again, my apologies for this being so late this week. Part of the result of the cause is that today's issue is really just a compilation of facts, rather than some original writing from FactsCanada.ca. Our goals are set much higher, and we aim to achieve them.


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