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United Conservatives back down on Alberta parks, declare victory: professor

EDMONTON — An Alberta political science professor is calling the United Conservative government's announcement on parks its first major policy defeat.
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Environment and Parks Minister Jason Nixon is seen during a news conference to announce $43 million in repairs and improvements to provincial parks at a news conference in Calgary on Tuesday, Sept. 15, 2020. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Todd Korol

EDMONTON — An Alberta political science professor is calling the United Conservative government's announcement on parks its first major policy defeat.

Duane Bratt of Calgary's Mount Royal University says the announcement is the first time he's seen the government back off an unpopular policy since coming into office.

Environment Minister Jason Nixon said late Tuesday that no parks would be removed from the provincial list or lose any of the protections they currently enjoy. 

Last spring, he said 184 parks would be fully or partly closed and those that the government couldn't hand off to third-party managers would revert to general Crown land.

Nixon said 170 parks have found partners, but he didn't say how many of those are long-standing arrangements and how many are new.

Bratt says the government announcement doesn't say who will be managing those parks, how they will be run or what limits will be placed on user fees. 

He also says the government is refusing to acknowledge the original policy's unpopularity.

The Canadian Press

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