September 08, 2005

Parks Day of Action -- Shannon Falls

Gwen Barlee

Two weeks ago the Wilderness Committee celebrated our first annual "Day of
Action" in British Columbia's provincial parks. On August 18th we joined
forces with four other environmental organizations and headed into 13 parks
across BC to educate visitors about how privatization and staff and budget
cuts are hurting BC's parks.

In the lower mainland Andy (WCWC's bird guy) and Tammy (the web mistress)
and Gil (volunteer extraordinaire) headed out to Cultus Lake Park in the
riding of our new environment Minister Barry Penner. While Louise
(campaigner), Geoff (map guy) and a retired professor from the University
of British Columbia, Marianne, and myself went to Shannon Falls Park.

The day was glorious: sun, a slight wind and the temperature hovering
around 25 Celsius all in all a perfect day to collect signatures and hand
out our educational newsletters.

Shannon Falls Park is renowned for its spectacular waterfall. The falls,
made up of a series of massive granite cliffs that tower 300 meters above
Highway 99, are the third highest falls in BC. Even in the dog days of
summer when the water has subsided from spring runoff the waterfall is
still spectacular: cascading down the rock cliffs and then winding slowly
through the giant cedars and Douglas firs at the bottom of the cliffs.

Shannon Falls is an ideal place to collect signatures because tens of
thousands of people stop by to visit the falls, which are just a ten minute
walk from the parking lot, on their way to Squamish and Whistler.

Shannon Falls is also perfect because it has the deeply hated parking
meters. In 2003 the BC Liberal government, with no public consultation,
introduced parking meters into 41 popular provincial parks. The public was
outraged and expressed their discontent is various ways: local people
stopped visiting parks with meters; people that did go largely refused to
pay the $3 and $5 dollar day-use fees and the government ended up missing
their revenue targets by over 75%. Although people were deeply concerned
about the 30% cut to the staff and budget of BC Parks, the weakening of the
BC Park Act and the fact the BC Liberal government gave permission to allow
commercial logging within park boundaries, nothing inflamed the public more
than the parking meters.

With our "Save BC Parks" petition firmly in hand we strategically located
at the parking meter ticket dispenser and at the trailhead just 50 meters
from the falls. From 10:00am to 2:30pm we collected over 400
signatures! Only one person that we approached refused to sign the
petition. Everyone else not only signed the petition they expressed
gratitude that we were out in the park collecting signatures.

We plan on presenting the signatures this fall to Minister Penner, who back
in the day was a park ranger himself. It will be interesting to see if
Minister Penner listens to the people of BC and removes the parking meters,
restores proper funding and staff to our beleaguered park system, and keeps
our parks public and protected for our children and grandchildren. Our park
system has taken almost a hundred years of blood, sweat and tears to build;
we need to make sure it is not dismantled in the next four.

Posted by Gwen Barlee at September 8, 2005 10:41 AM
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