A change in leadership at Riding Mountain National Park (RMNP) is being heralded as a good first step in restoring a positive relationship between Parks Canada and the communities surrounding the national park.
Parks Canada announced last week that Field Unit Superintendent Leane Cooper is being replaced in her roll at RMNP, efffective Sept. 11 and will move to a similar position with the agency in the Northwest Territories.
Cooper is being replaced by Tom Sheldon, who most recently was a policy manager with Parks Canada.
The move comes amid backlash over a unilateral decision Cooper made to ban motorized boats on Clear Lake, announced just one day before the summer opening of the park on the Victoria Day long weekend.
It was a move to slow the spread of zebra mussels on the lake, which was made without any consultation, blindsiding cottagers and business owners. It also spawned formation of the group Fairness for Clear Lake (FFCL), a coalition of community members, organizations, and businesses united by a shared commitment to the long-term health and prosperity of RMNP to provide a stronger, collective voice and to advocate for inclusive, transparent decision-making.
“While today’s announcement changes a nameplate on a door, it does not on its own change a culture of secrecy and unaccountability,” said Riding Mountain MP Dan Mazier, whose riding includes RMNP, one of two national parks in the province.
“The culture of secrecy must end. So must the divisive practice of conveying different information to different parties behind closed doors. Parks Canada is a public agency that is supposed to serve all Canadians.”
For the full story, read this week’s edition of the Dauphin Herald.