Riding Mountain National Park still waiting for Ottawa to restore winter activities - Action News
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Manitoba

Riding Mountain National Park still waiting for Ottawa to restore winter activities

A three-year-old federal promise to restore Parks Canada's funding has yet to bring back a full slate of winter activities to Riding Mountain National Park, frustrating efforts to bring more tourists and business to Manitoba's only road-accessible national park.

The Liberals pledged to reverse Tory cuts to Parks Canada. Winter programs in Manitoba have yet to be restored

Riding Mountain National Park winter activities

6 years ago
Duration 3:17
Riding Mountain National Park still waiting for Liberals to fulfill promise to restore funding for winter activities.

A three-year-old federal promiseto restoreParks Canada'sfunding has yet to bring back a full slate of winteractivities to Riding Mountain National Park, frustrating efforts to bring more tourists and business to Manitoba's only road-accessible national park.

In 2015, when Justin Trudeau's Liberal Party was trying knock off Stephen Harper's Conservatives in the federal election campaign, the Liberal Party platform called for the reversal of $25 million worth of cuts to the Parks Canada budget made by the Tories during the2012-13 budget season.

Those cuts forced Parks Canada to stop grooming hundreds of kilometres of ski and snowshoe trails at Riding Mountain National Park, halt winter interpretive programming and reduce staffing at the park gates on Highway 10.

Winter programming was also scaled back at othernational parks, including Prince Albert in Saskatchewan, leaving four-season operationsintact only at some ofCanada's most popular parks, including Banff and Jasper.

Communities around the affected parks soon complained aboutthe reduction in winter tourism, leading the Liberals to pledgea remedyif elected.

"We will reverse Stephen Harper's cuts to Parks Canada, which cut more than $25 million from programs and services, and made it more difficult for Canadians to experience our National Parks and learn more about our environment and our heritage," the party promised in its 88-pageelection platform booklet.

Karly McRae's Lakehouse Properties has invested millions in Wasagaming, including upgrades to two hotels that operate year round. She'd like to see Parks Canada reinvest in winter as well. (Gary Solilak/CBC)

But three years into the Trudeau government's first mandate, Riding Mountain has not been restored into a four-season destination.

"I think we definitely need to see the park kind of back to the way it was before 2012, helping to maintain all the trails," said George Hartlen, CAOof the non-profit Friends of Riding Mountain National Park.

He says while Parks Canada has resumed the grooming of some trails in the park, volunteers continue to handle much of the workload, not all trails have been reopened and interpretive programming and gate staff are only back for parts of the winter.

Cross-country skiing, snowshoeing, fat-tire biking and winter wildlife-watching are all becoming more popular, he says , but the park has not been able tocapitalize on the interest of Manitobans.

"They definitely want trails. They want ski trails. They want snowshoe trails," Hartlen said outside the Friends' office in Wasagaming, the townsiteon Clear Lake, within Riding Mountain NationalPark.

Moon Lake in Riding Mountain National Park, as seen during the winter. (Fallon Rose/Facebook)

The lack of trails and programming has affected businesses around Clear Lake, especially at Wasagamingand the nearby town of Onanole.

"We have the potential to have a really busy winter season for those that are staying open and those that would like to stay open,if the crowds are there."

Right now, the only hotels that stay open year round in the Clear Lake area are the Elkhorn resort at the edge of the Park and two properties in Wasagaming, Lakehouse and Arrowhead Resort.

They definitely want trails. They want ski trails. They want snowshoe trails.- GeorgeHartlen,CAOof the non-profit Friends of Riding Mountain National Park

Lakehouse Properties managing partner KarlyMcCrae says she and her associates have invested millions on upgrades to the two Wasagaminghotels as well as the Danceland social venue, partly in an effort to expand the tourist season at Wasagaming, where she says capacity is maxed out during the summer.

"The only way we can do that is to grow the shoulder seasons and grow winter," McRae said, speaking outside of Lakehouse.

"In my mind, Parks [Canada] is kind of looking at the situation backwards, in that they're investing in a peak time that we don't need to invest in. Summer is a given.

"RidingMountain is like this beautifulsnow-covered winter wonderland, to be totally clichd."

George Hartlen, chair of the Friends of Riding Mountain National Park, says winter visitors want more ski, snowshoe, skating and fat-bike trails. (Gary Solilak/CBC)

Dauphin-Swan River-Neepawa MP Bob Sopuck, whose party was in power when the cuts were made, says it is important to restore Riding Mountain to a four-season park.

"Our businesses are very cyclical here. They do very well in the summertime or as well as can be expected, but they have a fairly long winter to endure," he said outside his constituency office in Onanole.

Sopuck says the park's reliance on volunteers to conduct trail maintenanceposes a public-safety problem.

"The volunteers are very good country folk who know their way around thewoods,but still there is a liability issue that is concerning to me," he said.

Wendy Erlendson grabbed a shot of frozen trees along a road in the national park. (Wendy Erlendson/Facebook)

The MP says he's been told Parks Canada could resume grooming all of the ski trails within the park itself byreallocating $60,000.

"All it would take is one phone call from [Environment Minister] Catherine McKenna and I think the job could be done and why she hasn't done that is beyond me," Sopuck said.

"I guess I'm helping the Liberals out here by telling them what an easy fix it is, but it's more important the people here be served and the park get looked after than me scoring cheap political points."

Conservative MP Bob Sopuck (Dauphin-Swan River-Neepawa) says Parks Canada could easily restore winter programming at Riding Mountain National Park. (Gary Solilak/CBC)

McKenna's communications staff did not respond to requests for comment.

Parks Canada also declined interview requests, but issued a statement listingwinter improvements at Riding Mountain, including the partial restoration of ski-trail grooming and winter staffing,the winterization ofpicnic shelters and Wasagamingcampground rental tents, the addition of fat-bike rentals and snow-plowing at trailhead parking lots.

Parks Canada spokesperson Chantal Skraba stopped short of promising to restore all four-season amenities and programming at the park.

"The winter activities and services offered in 2018/2019 will be assessed to help Parks Canada understand visitor needs and interests as it plans future winter operations at Riding Mountain National Park," she said in the statement.

Hartlensays the interest is already present.

"Winter time is actually getting more and more popular," he said. "We are definitely getting more people out that are walking and snowshoeing and definitely as our climate is starting to change, we're getting little more milder winters.

"We definitely are seeing dramatic increase in the winter events we hold."

McRae says Lakehousealso uses events to attract winter visitors in off-peak seasons. For example,Lakehouse holdsNew Year's Eve parties along Clear Lake and is partnering up with Winnipeg's RAW: Almond crew for a Wasagaming-area meal this fall.

Parks Canada is starting to see the wisdom in operating at full steam all year, she says.

"Winter is becoming hip and I think they're slowly starting to see that, but as we know,government moves very slowly," McRae said.

However, privatebusinesses in Wasagaming have started staying open later in the fall and reopening earlier in the spring, she says, listing off a handful of retail stores and restaurants.

"I'm always waiting for the next person to take that leap and open in the winter as well," she said. "Not everyone's crazy like us and just takes the plunge."

- With a file from the Canadian Press