Mayor of Golden disappointed by CP Rail's river-road closure over long weekend - Action News
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Mayor of Golden disappointed by CP Rail's river-road closure over long weekend

The mayor of Golden, B.C., says it's "unfortunate" that CP Rail closed access to the lower canyon of the Kicking Horse River over the May long weekend, even though waters were too high to allow for rafting, anyway.

Water too high to ride, anyway, but Ron Oszust said company could have kept road open as 'good faith' measure

Whitewater rafting on the Kicking Horse River attracts 40,000 visitors a year to Golden. (Glacier Raft Company)

The mayor of Golden, B.C.,says it's "unfortunate" that CP Rail closed access to the lower canyon of the Kicking Horse River over the May long weekend, even though waters were too high to allow for rafting, anyway.

It would have been a sign of "good faith" for the company to keep access to the river open, Ron Oszust said, despite recent rains making that section of the river too swollen for rafting companies to use, for now.

CP Rail remains locked in a dispute with the B.C. government over a road that crosses an active rail line and serves as the only access point to that part of the canyon.

Rafting companies have used the road in the past to get to and from the river but CP Rail put an end to that this year, citing liability concerns.

After ameeting in April,it appeared a solution had been reached,buton Friday,the company locked the access gate andclaimed the B.C. government had backed out of its side of the deal.

In a news release, CP Rail said the province "reversed a position that formed the basis for an agreement-in-principle that would have seen rafting companies granted access to cross active CP railway tracks safely to the lower canyon of the Kicking Horse River."

The company said it needsthe province, in particular, to "assume the risks associated with any safety-related incident arising directly from this special access for rafters."

Rafting companies surprised

Ryan Johannesen, owner of Glacier Rafting in Golden, said he was surprised when he spotted the gate being installed on Saturday.

"As we drove past, we saw them installing a gate right off the highway. The previous gate was down lower, closer to the tracks," he said.

Over the weekend, he said extra CP Rail police were on hand to ensure companies were not trespassing.

Johannesenis surprised the issue hasn't been resolved.

"You know, you don't come to a meeting and say 'hey, it's resolved, we're going to save the day' as CP did, and then it's May long and it's not open here," he said.

"It just seems to be getting more and more complicated for something that's really simple to do and we've been doing for so long."

Opposition MLA sides with government

The NDP MLA who represents the area, however, sided with B.C.'s Liberal government in the dispute.

"I hold CP Rail directly responsible for this fiasco," Norm Macdonald, the MLA forColumbiaRiver-Revelstoke, wrote in a publicFacebookpost.

"There may be attempts to cast blame on other parties, but I reject that," he added.

"CP Rail came to my community and made a clear promise. This is the responsibility of CP Rail to solve, and it is the expectation of the people of Golden that CP Rail do what needs to be done to fulfill their commitment to the community. Nothing less is acceptable."

The province, for its part, says it'sworking to find a solution.

"Provincialstaff has been on the ground directly working with the local government, rafters and CP to help facilitate an agreement," theMinistry of Jobs, Tourism and Skills Training said in a statement.

"We are disappointed that we have moved from celebrating an agreement in principle onApril 22to now facing the loss of the summer rafting season," the ministry added.

"The province remains willing to take reasonable steps to find a way to keep the season open but need CP to be a reasonable partner."

Mayor still 'optimistic'

The mayor of Golden, who participated in the April discussionswith CP Rail and provincial government officials,said the company told them at the time "that there would be rafting on the lower canyon even if there was not a signed agreement" by the time Victoria Day rolled around.

"It's unfortunate that there wasn't thefulfillmentof the commitment to allow rafting on the lower canyon for the long weekend,"Oszustsaid.

A CP Rail spokesman said Monday the company had nothing further to say on the matter.

Oszustsaid the company and province are set to have more discussions Tuesdayand that he believes a workable agreement is still possible.

"We're still optimistic that both parties can find the solution that they both can live with," he said.

Johannesenis optimistic as well, despite a bit of worry about how things will work out.

"Right now we're sort of proceeding as if, you know, the right thing is going to happen herewhich we feel is bound to happen eventuallywhich is we can access the entire river here, and the lower canyon."

With files from Diane Yanko