Insurance impasse puts snowmobile season on thin ice - Action News
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Ottawa

Insurance impasse puts snowmobile season on thin ice

The United Counties of Prescott & Russellis refusing to renew its insurance agreement with the volunteer-run association that oversees snowmobiling clubs in the province, placing some parts of eastern Ontario's trail network off limits.

Trails closed across eastern Ontario network

Hundreds of kilometers of snowmobile trails criss-cross the United Counties of Prescott & Russell. (Denis Babin/Radio-Canada)

A dispute over insurance is putting the recreational snowmobile seasonin eastern Ontario on thinice.

The Ontario Federation of Snowmobile Clubs (OFSC), whose members operate and maintain thousands of kilometres of trails across the province, issuesliability insurance certificates to private landowners whose property the trails cross.

But this year, some landowners in this region are refusing to renew that arrangement.

The United Counties of Prescott & Russellis one of those landowners.In a French-language interview, the municipality's director of planning, Louis Prevost, said itslawyers have recommended against renewing the annual certificate.

According to Prevost, they're concerned the coverage would limit civil liability in the event of an accident.

Plantagenet, Ont., restaurateur Charles Lamarche worries about the effect of the trail closures on his business. (Denis Babin/Radio-Canada)

Trails closed

The imbroglio has forced the Snowmobile Club of Eastern Ontario (SCEO), an OFSC member,to close 100 kilometres of its trails, about one-quarter of its network.

"Why was it acceptable last year and not this year?" asked SCEO president Kim Melbourne. "It's frustrating."

The closures punch holes in the network of interconnected routes that take sledders from one end of the Prescott & Russell to the other, Melbourne said.

"Maybe the [snowmobile club] members will be happy just going around in circles, and when they get bored they'll just turn around and go the other way," she scoffed.

The insurance impasse means popular trails through the Larose forest, a huge wooded area in the western part of the region, is off limits, as is a former rail corridor still owned by CN, which crosses the region from the Ontario-Quebec border Ottawa's city limits.

Snowmobilier Sbastien Saumure said the closures present a danger to riders who might not expect to encounter a gate across a familiar trail. (Denis Babin/Radio-Canada)

'It's dangerous'

"Right now, it's dangerous," said snowmobilerSbastien Saumure,who worries the sudden trail closures will catch some by surprise.

Saumure, who lives inL'Orignal, Ont., said he's more likely to go sledding in western Quebec where the trails remain uninterrupted.

That worries Charles Lamarche, who estimates half thewintertime customers at his bar-motelin Plantagenet, Ont., aresnowmobilers.

"If there's no snowmobile season, I really don't know what we're going to do," he said in French.

Instead of enjoying their sport, Melbourne and other volunteers with the club will have to spend their time posting "Trail Closed" signs along the network. She's imploring members to obey them.

With files from Denis Babin