January 20th, 2025

UCP government paving paradise with all-season resorts


By Lethbridge Herald on December 5, 2024.

LORNE FITCH

Bill 35, the All Season Resorts Act, is proposed by the UCP government as an answer to a question Albertans have never asked. As such, the legislation is an insiders game of plunking upscale hotels and facilities on public land, including Alberta Parks, irrespective of existing regional plans, protected areas or critical wildlife habitats. 

This Bill has been modelled after Tolkien’s “One ring to rule them all.” The Minister of Tourism and Sport can arbitrarily exempt a resort proposal from any existing protective legislation, fast track a proposal without any public consultation or input and shield the development from review by the Natural Resources Conservation Board. That is a substantial bit of power entrusted to a department (and a minister) with no experience or expertise in land-use planning, including assessing environmental impacts.

Added to this, the Bill exempts development on all season resort areas from the normal environmental planning, reviewing and permitting processes normally applied to activities on public lands. What possibly could go wrong with headwaters water quality and quantity, species at risk habitats, wildfire prevention and more human traffic with such a cavalier attitude? There is no provision for consultation with Indigenous Peoples, affected communities or existing tourism-focused activities.

Albertans have become used to the somewhat sacred nature of our parks and protected areas. It was not long ago this same government tried to deconsecrate many of them in an ill advised and thinly veiled attempt at cost saving. It seems this government is a slow learner on how Albertans view their public lands.

This ill conceived idea of upscale “resorts” in the heart of existing recreational areas for Albertans creates a question of who the marketing targets are for these developments. For Albertans? Hardly!

This endeavour to bring more people into some of our more scenic landscapes also fails to recognize we are surely on a path to love these places to death. The places where business interests will want to build five star hotels isn’t vacant space. Far from it.

Those giving us Bill 35 and spectre of resort developments seem oblivious to the existing and future recreational (and other land use) pressures in the Eastern Slopes. It’s hard to see clearly when there are loonies over your eyes. A government funded study by the Tourism Industry Association of Alberta (2021) had six recommendations about growing recreation, but made no mention of how to manage growth to protect ecological values or how to maintain recreational quality. We have yet to learn that more is not better, yet here we are with this Bill.

Bill 35 is a sneaky way to privatize our public lands. The UCP government seems fixated on paving paradise in Alberta with this single minded push to allow the building of all season resorts on what is our cherished public lands. Really!?

Lorne Fitch is a Professional Biologist, a retired Fish and Wildlife Biologist and a former Adjunct Professor with the University of Calgary. He is the author of Streams of Consequence and Travels Up the Creek: A Biologist’s Search For a Paddle.

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buckwheat

Oh the horror, turn down the volume. We need a mine in the CNP, you’re against that, we need tourism in the province, you’re against that. Seems you’re the ultimate nimby.

SophieR

Seems to me, buck, that he is only asking for public transparency and due process. Foundations of democracy, no?

We don’t ‘need’ anything that makes things worse for us in the long run. Like undermining ecosystems.

biff

you so often have me ask you: why do you see money – and the irresponsible corp giant that walks away with, by far, the most of the wealth, and leaves behind a mess – as being more important than decency and sustainability and respect for the living planet?
most of our issues are not due to needs, even with overpopulation of humans; our issues are by far due to wants based consumerism, and the degree of our collective conscience coming down to whether one has the money to do and buy…and of course, the anthem of it all, mcjobs.

Southern Albertan

It appears that, every day, this UCP government is up to no good. I have written a letter of protest to this UCP government regarding this Bill 35. How much worse does it have to get in this province? Again, hell in a handbasket…….

buckwheat

Instructive You Tube, the greens want the minerals and mining, just not in their back yard. As long as the suffering is in Africa and South America they’re good
https://youtu.be/qQj3ZSzh38E?si=xV050qc-V_z07KOO

SophieR

Kind of you to bring the pollution and suffering home.

Wait, my Manichean friend! How about reducing everyone’s suffering (including future people) and live within planetary limits?

biff

another excellent sharing, thank you.
seems that even post enlightenment the degree and breadth of human hubris can still shut off all the lights.

Sheran.

I have always enjoyed travel with my husband and family and we have enjoyed many resorts across the US in parks/scenic areas, and would love to enjoy similar travel in Alberta, to areas that often can only be enjoyed by camping. If they put a resort let’s say in Kananaskis, I would love it!
I think this is more of a political statement, timed toward the upcoming by election to attack the UCP, something of which I am sure we will see more of in the next couple of weeks. NDP desperate acts to get more votes!

biff

you underscore the most pressing issues of our time: money is the sole or primary basis by which to justify selfish, unsustainable living. i believe you are religious? how is it some of the very most religious are dandy with trashing god’s house?



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