Thunder Bay

'A lot of work' needed for better access to Lake Superior marine park

A meeting in Nipigon, Ont., last week involving Parks Canada staff, consultants and stakeholders in the Lake Superior National Marine Conservation Area focused on plans to improve access to the relatively new water park.

Bettering public access along north shore to launch watercraft discussed at recent meeting

Lake Superior during the daytime.
A meeting among stakeholders in the Lake Superior National Marine Conservation Area discussed bettering access to the water park from the north shore. (Matt Prokopchuk/CBC)

A meeting in Nipigon, Ont., last week involving Parks Canada staff, consultants and stakeholders in the Lake Superior National Marine Conservation Area focused on planning to improve access to the relatively new water park.

The conservation area was created in 2015 and proponents are now turning their attention to improving the locations where people can launch watercraft from the north shore into Lake Superior.

"There are some very obvious places that access will take place but we also have to recognize that there are areas along the coastline where access is going to be more difficult, yet we need to have access," said Richard Harvey, the mayor of Nipigon, who also attended the Aug. 14 meeting.

"There are [also] areas where there is access but it may not be up to the standard, up to the quality of access that we'd like to have."
The Lake Superior National Marine Conservation Area was established in 2015. (http://www.ijc.org)

One of those points, Harvey said, is the old dock at Silver Islet, east of Thunder Bay. It's been closed since 2013 when Fisheries and Oceans Canada — who owns it — deemed it structurally unsafe.

The meeting in Nipigon was a chance for the new president of the Silver Islet Campers Association to pitch for that to change.

"Some 50,000 some-odd visitors to the provincial park, they frequently drive down the road here to Silver Islet and basically they have no way to get out onto the lake, short of a fairly run-down boat launch and a condemned dock," Scott Cheadle said.

"I think there's a broad consensus that Silver Islet is a key access point — we're one of the few points that has a provincial highway terminating at the dock," he continued. "And we have a huge captive audience of visitors to the provincial park."

Cheadle also pointed to his community's proximity to Thunder Bay as another plus.

A Parks Canada spokesperson said that about 30 access points along the north shore are being studied to see which ones will be best suited to serve as official entrances to the conservation area. Cory Gaudet said that those chosen will be upgraded, including establishing signage and educational displays.

"It's not about ownership or taking over any of these access points, it's about how can we join the region together so that it's one coordinated interpretive experience for visitors coming," he said.

More launch sites needed

Despite several north shore communities having marinas or boat launches, Harvey said there isn't an abundance of proper access points from land into the marine conservation area.

"People think of there being a lot of marinas, a lot of docks, things like that, but at the same time, there really aren't," he said, adding that there's essentially nothing, for instance, between Nipigon and Rossport.

"We have a whole gap in there where there really is no public access and those are the things that have to be looked at," he said.
Nipigon's waterfront is one way people can access the Lake Superior National Marine Conservation area, but the town's mayor says there are few options between Nipigon and Rossport. (Jeff Walters / CBC)

Adding to the need for better access, Harvey and Cheadle said, is the large number of recreational and other opportunities in that part of Lake Superior, including trips to refurbished lighthouses and dive tourism.

A strategy done by Parks Canada that consulted area tourism stakeholders on the conservation area found that limited development of water access points and the need for better infrastructure at existing facilities were two weaknesses of the water park.

"There is a lot of work that has to be done," Harvey said. "There's a lot of engagement that has to take place."

Also in need of improvement, parks officials were told, was signage to direct people where to go — something Harvey said was evident at the stakeholders meeting.

"There [were] consultants who came in because they went to visit the places [the various existing and proposed access points] and ... wayfinding signage became one of the things that kept coming up, even for all the existing facilities," he said.

"They actually had a lot of difficulty in some cases, finding boat launches, finding these various things."

Gaudet said Parks Canada expects to meet again with stakeholders in October.