Manitoba has paid $1M in e-licensing fees to U.S. company contracted to sell park passes online - Action News
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Manitoba

Manitoba has paid $1M in e-licensing fees to U.S. company contracted to sell park passes online

Manitobans have been able to go online for the past two yearsto buy a provincial park pass, but thatconveniencealso resulted inan American company pocketing $1 million.

New online process costs 10 times as much, results in more expensive passes, NDP critic says

Park passes in Manitoba have become more expensive, with a $4.50 administration fee going to the U.S.-based company contracted to sell the passes, along with hunting and angling licences, online. (Tyson Koschik/CBC)

Manitobans have been able to go online for the past two yearsto buy a provincial park pass, but thatconveniencealso resulted inan American company pocketing $1 million.

Documents obtained by the Opposition NDP show that Aspira the Texas-based firm the province contractedin 2020 to sell park passes, as well as hunting and angling licences, online received $558,145 in the first year in e-licensing fees and an additional $528,071 from April 2021 to January 2022.

Altogether, the province has spent $1,086,216for the online service, which the Progressive Conservative government initially touted as providing Manitobans with easier access and decreasing the carbon footprint.

However, the deal was eventuallylambasted, as Manitobansnoticed their fees going stateside to acompany based in Dallas.

Consumers also paid more, sinceAspira tacked on a $4.50 administration fee for the online purchases. For a day pass which previously cost $5, thesurcharge nearly doubled the price of entry, to $9.50.

Online buying popular: government

NDP environment critic Lisa Naylor acknowledged the government probably needed to modernize its paper-only booking system, but says the execution was off the mark.

"The old process cost the government about $50,000 a year. The new process costs the government 10 times that muchand all of that money is going to another country, and that's a problem."

Naylor suggested there could be an alternative where an online supplier inManitoba is used instead. She also said the administration fee, as it stands, is too high.

Currently, park passes can be purchased online andthrough participating retailers, but there are not nearly as many in-person locations as before.

A government spokespersonsaidthat the vendor won the right to sell park passes online through an "open and transparent tendering process."

"Thisonline option has become very popular with consumers and was particularly practical offering contactless access to licences during the pandemic."

During question period on Thursday, Parks Minister Jeff Wharton repeated an already-announced pledge that Manitoba would improve its reservation system in time for 2023.

The system gets bogged down every spring as demand for camping spots outstrips supply.