Harper to announce new national park during northern tour - Action News
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Politics

Harper to announce new national park during northern tour

Prime Minister Stephen Harper will announce the creation of a massive new national park in the Northwest Territories during his summer tour of the Canadian North, CBC News has learned.

Making 7th trip to the North as prime minister

Prime Minister Stephen Harper stands by the Nahanni River in Nahanni National Park Reserve, Northwest Territories, during a trip in 2007. Harper is set to announce a new reserve or park along the river during his latest visit. (Fred Chartrand/Canadian Press)

Prime Minister Stephen Harper will announce the creation of a massive new national park in the Northwest Territories duringhis summer tour of the CanadianNorth, CBC News has learned.

Harper began the five-day tour, his seventh such trip as prime minister,on Monday, landing in Whitehorse, Yukonin the mid-afternoon.

The newpark,called Naats'ihch'oh (pronounced nat-TSEEN-cho), is to be located ona huge piece of land just north and alongside of the existing Nahanni National Park Reserve. The area includes the headwaters of the world-famous Nahanni River.

It's possible Naats'ihch'ohwill also bea reserve or partly a reserve entitled to somewhat less protection than a full national park. But either way it seems thousands of square kilometres of land will be set apart.

Harper's spokesman, Andrew MacDougall, says the North is a key part of the prime minister's agenda one he has been focused on since taking office in 2006.

"Part of the purpose of this exercise every year is to demonstrate progress, and to update[Canadians] on where we are on certain projects," said MacDougall.

Northern strategy

The new park or reserve will be located next to the existing Nahanni National Park Reserve, denoted by the red marker, along the Nahanni River in the Northwest Territories. (Google Map)

The trip is a kind of PR tour for what the government refers to as its northern strategy: a package of ideas that guides its engagement in the North.

Over the years, Harper has made a series of promises focused on the North buthas had trouble keeping some of them.

The government has for six years now been promising to build Arctic patrol ships, but construction has yet to begin. It has also planned a deepwater port, but work on that base in Nanisivik has barely begun.

"These initiatives are all important, they're all worth doing, but they are hard to do," said MacDougall.

Interim Liberal Leader Bob Rae said Harper's trip was worthwhile, but questioned the government's commitment to the North, during a press conference in Ottawa Monday.

"The kinds of cutbacks that weve seen on the environment, on providing basic investments for communities, on looking at the human challenges that face northerners, the government's actions belie any rhetoric which might flow from various announcements that the prime minister will make this week," Rae said.

Rae pointed to what he called the government's failure to deal with the impact of climate change in the North.

"The effect of climate change is more dramatically felt in northern Canada than any other part of the country. It's affecting housing, it's affecting hunting, it's affecting health, it's affecting every aspect of northern life. The changes in permafrost is causing serious damage to housing in a great many communities," Rae said.

"I don't see a serious response on climate change from this government. And I think the people who feel that more than anyone else right now are the people living in northern Canada."

The government has promised to build a high-Arctic research station in Cambridge Bay and money was set aside in 2007. More news on thatproject is expected later this week.

Corrections

  • The headline on this story has been edited from a previous version which incorrectly stated that the prime minister was to announce the creation of an Arctic national park. In fact, the location of the expected park is south of the Arctic Circle.
    Aug 20, 2012 3:57 PM ET

With files from the CBC's James Cudmore