Albertans Encouraged to Love their Headwaters, Celebrate Water Sources

June 27, 2017
By: admin

Albertans Encouraged to Love their Headwaters, Celebrate Water Sources

  — Press Release June 27, 2017

EDMONTON – Today Yellowstone to Yukon Conservation Initiative (Y2Y) and the Canadian Parks and Wilderness Society (CPAWS) launched a new program to bring Albertans together with a simple message: Love your headwaters.

“Albertans need reliable clean water,” says Stephen Legault, program director for Y2Y. “Our water comes from the narrow strip of mountains and foothills that run along our western border. Nine out of every ten glasses of water from our taps comes from just 10 percent of our land base. We need to protect this precious water source.”

The groups have created a new website at loveyourheadwaters.ca to highlight and bring together various efforts to protect the province’s headwaters in the Castle, Kananaskis/Ghost and Bighorn regions. 

“Since the inception of our province, Albertans have recognized the need to protect our headwaters,” says Dr. Hilary Young, Y2Y program manager. “While Alberta has always maintained the importance of protecting water, we haven’t always managed the landscapes and watersheds very well.” 

Threats to our provincial headwaters include widespread commercial logging, coal mining, unregulated off-highway vehicle use and a massive network of roads, trails and seismic lines associated with more than a century of oil and gas development. 

“In southern Alberta we’ve made excellent progress in the last two years,” says Katie Morrison, conservation director with the Southern Alberta chapter of CPAWS. “Protecting the Castle as a wildland and provincial park is a great step forward. More work needs to be done, however, to protect the watersheds for Calgary, Lethbridge and other southern communities. Commercial clear-cut logging threatens the Highwood and Elbow watersheds in Kananaskis and much of the Oldman watershed further south. These forests should be managed to protect water and wildlife, not for wood fibre,” she says. 

“We have an opportunity to create new protected areas that conserve nearly 90 per cent of Edmonton’s headwaters in the Bighorn Wildland,” says Dr. Kecia Kerr, executive director of the Northern Alberta chapter of CPAWS.

“We know that more than 80 percent of Edmontonians and 68 percent of rural residents near the Bighorn support protection of this region. Now is the time to ensure Edmonton’s water stays clean and clear for the future,” she says.

Albertans are invited to Love their headwaters by visiting the site, learning more, and getting involved in local and regional efforts to protect this treasured resource. 

For more information:

Stephen Legault, Yellowstone to Yukon Conservation Initiative Program Director for Crown, Alberta and Northwest Territories
Phone: 403-688-2964 | Email: [email protected]

Katie Morrison, CPAWS Southern Alberta Conservation Director
Phone: 403-463-6337 | Email: [email protected] 

Hilary Young, Yellowstone to Yukon Conservation Initiative Alberta Program Manager
Phone: 403-609-2666 ext. 104 | Email: [email protected]

Dr. Kecia Kerr, CPAWS Northern Alberta Executive Director
Phone: 780-328-3780 ext. 1 | Email: [email protected]

 

BACKGROUNDER

The Canadian Parks and Wilderness Society

The Canadian Parks and Wilderness Society (CPAWS) is Canada’s only nationwide charity dedicated solely to the protection of our public land and water and ensuring our parks are managed to protect the biodiversity within them. Over the last 50+ years, CPAWS has played a lead role in protecting over half a million square kilometres – an area bigger than the entire Yukon Territory. Our vision is to protect at least half of our public land and water so that future generations can experience Canada’s irreplaceable wilderness.

CPAWS has chapters in almost every province and territory across Canada, and two chapters here in Alberta – a Southern Alberta chapter located in Calgary and a Northern Alberta chapter located in Edmonton. As a collaborative organization, CPAWS works closely with government of all levels, industry representatives, and communities to manage our impact on a shared landscape. We also advocate for the creation of parks and protected areas for the benefit of both current and future generations of Canadians.

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