[NatureNS] Blue Mountain - Birch Cove Lakes Wilderness Area (HRM) is born...

Date: Tue, 30 Oct 2007 17:24:13 -0300
From: Dusan Soudek <soudekd@ns.sympatico.ca>
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Province Creates Near-urban Wilderness Area 
Natural Resources/Environment and Labour
October 30, 2007 10:57
  _____  

Nova Scotians will have a chance to explore, study and enjoy nature in a
new protected wilderness area next to the province's largest urban
population.

Blue Mountain-Birch Cove Lakes Wilderness Area will be within the
boundary of Nova Scotia's capital, Halifax Regional Municipality.

The province will designate 1,350 hectares (3,350 acres) of Crown lands
between Highway 103 and the Bicentennial Highway, adjacent to the Bayers
Lake Business Park.

"This unique wilderness area, located within city municipal boundaries,
will ensure that people can more easily experience the rejuvenating
powers of nature within their own community," said Mark Parent, Minister
of Environment and Labour, at a ceremony today, Oct. 30, in Hammonds
Plains, Halifax Regional Municipality.

The Environmental Goals and Sustainable Prosperity Act
commits the province to protecting 12 per cent of Nova Scotia's land
mass by 2015. Blue Mountain-Birch Cove Lakes Wilderness Area will help
meet that provincial goal.

The wilderness area designation will protect numerous interconnected,
undeveloped lakes and wetlands; rugged woodlands with old red oak and
red spruce stands; and a rare arctic-alpine plant called Mountain
Sandwort. It will also help protect exceptional outdoor education and
wilderness recreation opportunities such as hiking, swimming,
cross-country skiing, canoeing and angling.

"I would like to thank the Department of Natural Resources, led by my
colleague David Morse, for helping to make this unique near-urban
wilderness area a reality," said Mr. Parent.

Blue Mountain-Birch Cove Lakes Wilderness Area will complement Halifax
Regional Municipality's regional planning strategy, which includes
creating a large park in that region.

"I'm very pleased with the province's collaborative approach and support
for HRM's regional plan," said Mayor Peter Kelly. "This will help us
move forward with HRM's plans for a regional park in the area."

The environmental value of the lands was highlighted in an environmental
assessment report into the proposed Highway 113.

The independent report notes that the proposed highway route
is outside the area worthy of protection.

The wilderness-area designation addresses the report's recommendation
that lands south of the proposed highway route be protected.

For more information about Nova Scotia's 34 protected wilderness areas,
visit the Environment and Labour Department's website at
<http://www.gov.ns.ca/enla/protectedareas>
www.gov.ns.ca/enla/protectedareas .
 

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