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Braid: Overwhelmed by success of Kananaskis Country, the UCP slaps on user fees

Article content Many Calgarians think of Kananaskis Country as their backyard. Starting June 1, it will be more like a city street, with scanner vehicles checking plates and issuing parking tickets. ParkPlus in the mountains. There is no escape. We apologize, but this video has failed to load. Try refreshing your browser, or Braid: Overwhelmed by success of Kananaskis Country, the UCP slaps on user fees Back to video The park that the late PC premier Peter Lougheed created in 1978 has always been free to users. Calgarians have boundless affection for this magnificent area. Now, we have to pay starting June 1, $15 for a day pass and $90 for a full year.

Not sustainable: Alberta bringing user fee to Kananaskis Country west of Calgary

By The Canadian Press on April 27, 2021. Tourists explore a resort  in Kananaskis, Alta., Monday, April 25, 2016. Southern Albertans hoping to escape to the mountains in the midst of the COVID-19 pandemic will soon have to pay for the privilege. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Jeff McIntosh KANANASKIS, Alta. – Albertans hoping to escape to a popular provincial recreation area in the Rockies during the COVID-19 pandemic will soon have to pay for the privilege. Kananaskis Country, which is about 100 kilometres west of Calgary, has been flooded with visitors – particularly over the past year due to restrictions designed to limit the spread of the virus.

Gov t has bias on coal policy, SACPA told

The Southern Alberta Council on Public Affairs welcomed Alberta Wilderness Association conservation director Ian Urquhart to a special edition of its YouTube weekly livestream speaker series on Monday to discuss his thoughts on the current coal policy review underway in Alberta. Urquhart said, drawing on his decades of experience as a political scientist, the intentions of the government are always revealed in how it frames the questions it is asking Albertans to “consult” on. In the case of the coal policy review, the government’s bias is obvious, he stated, when it drafts terms of reference around the policy review which precludes land use and water considerations from being part of the policy process.

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