Alberta Parks is an agency of the Government of Alberta which is responsible for managing Alberta's provincial parks and protected areas.[citation needed]

Alberta Parks
Agency overview
Formed1930; 94 years ago (1930)
JurisdictionAlberta
Headquarters9820 - 106 Street, Edmonton, Alberta
T5K 2J6
53°32′10″N 113°30′13″W / 53.5361°N 113.5035°W / 53.5361; -113.5035
Parent departmentAlberta Forestry Parks and Tourism
Websitealbertaparks.ca
Map
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Map of provincial parks and protected areas in Alberta

History

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Alberta's system of provincial parks began with the striking of a committee on parks by then Premier J. E. Brownlee in 1929. This led to the passage of the Provincial Parks and Protected Areas Act in 1930 and the formation of the Provincial Board of Management to oversee the system. The first provincial parks were Aspen Beach Provincial Park, established in 1932, followed by Gooseberry Lake, Park Lake, Sylvan Lake and Saskatoon Island later that same year. However further development of the system was halted during the Great Depression and during the Second World War.

Major changes began in 1950 with the passage of a new Parks Act, the transferring of responsibilities for parks to the Department of Lands and Forests, and the creation of a new three-person Parks Board. A major budget increase in 1952-53 saw the hiring of the first full-time parks staff. The parks system expanded rapidly with 46 new parks established between 1951 and 1971, focused mostly on recreational campgrounds near lakes. As well in 1959 the Provincial Parks Branch was established, headed by a Provincial Parks Commissioner, who reported to the parks board. Also in 1950 the Parks Branch began to establish provincial historic sites.[1]

In addition to new provincial parks proper, other park-like areas were established by other government departments: the Department of Highways and Transport had network of roadside campgrounds for the new wave of automotive tourists and the Alberta Forest Service had a network of recreation areas in forested regions to divert backcountry camping into fewer site, so they could be well monitored and regulated, and environmental impacts localized to just a few places. After the late 1950s the focus of Alberta's parks policy began to shift from recreation to wilderness preservation. Willmore Wilderness Park was created in 1959 outside of the parks system under separate legislation to preserve it as a hunting and trapping ground and protect it from industrial development. The Parks Act was amended in 1964 to allow for the creation of wilderness areas and natural areas as well as parks, and this was reinforced by the Wilderness Areas Act of 1971.

A major report on parks was tabled in the legislature in 1973 by the Honourable Allan Warrack, Minister of Lands and Forests, which concluded that the park system was inadequate, more park lands were needed, existing parks were badly in need of upgrading, there were serious resource development conflicts in some parks, and Albertans in metropolitan centres (in particular seniors and disadvantaged Albertans) lacked opportunities to visit parks. A major budget expansion followed and many new parks were created at this time. In 1975 when the Department of Lands and Forests was dissolved, responsibly for parks, was transferred to the new Department of Recreation, Parks, and Wildlife.[1] In addition the Environment Department began creating campground and picnic areas on lakes and reservoirs to limit erosion and other environmental impacts of recreation. Finally, in the early 1990s all of Alberta's parks and protected areas were consolidated under the management of Alberta Parks.

[2]

Statistics

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As of 2014 the parks system included:

Acres Hectares
3 Wilderness Areas 249,550 101,000
15 Ecological Reserves 66,330 26,800
32 Wildland Provincial Parks 4,278,340 1,731,400
Willmore Wilderness Park 1,135,870 459,700
75 Provincial Parks 546,050 221,000
208 Provincial Recreation Areas 217,180 87,900
2 Heritage Rangelands 29,680 12,000
139 Natural Areas 321,090 129,900
for a total of 475 sites covering 6,844,090 2,769,700

In addition 10 sites representing 3,584 acres (1,450 ha) are controlled by Alberta Parks but are not (yet) designated as part of a park or protected area.[3]

See also

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References

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  1. ^ a b "Culture and Status of Women".
  2. ^ "Our History | Alberta Parks".
  3. ^ "Land Reference Manual | Alberta Parks".