Ours to Lose
Trail association
questions whether NL
coastline under threat
by development
Written by Stephanie
Porter of “The
Independent”
Reprinted with
permission from “The
Independent”
VOL. 5 ISSUE 42 — ST. JOHN’S,
NEWFOUNDLAND AND LABRADOR
OCTOBER 19-25, 2007
East Coast Trail Association
president Randy Murphy looks
at a map of the Avalon
Peninsula, the coastline dotted with
small yellow circles. Each one
represents a problem, or “case,” for
the association — a development
that blocks, or may block, the
public’s access to both the coast and
the trail that Murphy and thousands
of other volunteers have built up
over the past 13 years.
“There’s 46 of them right now,
andthat number is growing,” says
Murphy, running a finger along the
outline of land. He refers to cases
like the socalled “castle” in Logy
Bay, which abruptly blocks 300 and
500 metres of traditional right-ofway;
a possible rezoning of 80 acres
of land near Pouch Cove for coastal
estates; a proposal a couple of years
ago for nearly 200 acres of large-lot
houses and a golf course north of
Bay Bulls; countless other examples
of towns and private developers
snapping up pieces of prime seaside
property for homes or commercial
endeavors.
In other words, Murphy says, the
wilderness and unspoiled beauty of
the province’s dramatic coastline —
the very things that draw hikers,
tourists, berry pickers and nature
lovers — are under increasing
pressure. The association is
lobbying the province to enact
legislation now to preserve that
resource into the future.
“The challenge is very serious,”
Murphy says. “It’s growing
exponentially each year and demand
for our coastline and wilderness
land for developments such as
housing is one of the greatest …
threats to the trail’s continued use.”
It’s difficult to pinpoint exactly
how much of the coast is being eyed
by developers from the province or
elsewhere — records are scattered,
many proposals quiet, community
research not always easy or ordered
— but the association has estimated
up to 60 km of its developed trail
may have a tenuous future.
Murphy brings up the example of
Nova Scotia: only five per cent of
that province’s coastline is still
Crown land and publicly accessible.
Murphy says the Nova Scotia
government is now trying to buy
back some of that private land to
return it to locals and visitors.
Similar things are happening all
over the world, as available seaside
property becomes increasingly rare
and lucrative.
“We’re not anti-development,”
says Murphy, “and we’re not trying
to take a hit at anyone. All we’re
asking for is to define the rules,
manage the rules, define xpectations
within the communities and the
marketplace: if you want access to
the coastline, this is how it happens.
“It’s not there right now. Existing
legislation does not provide
adequate protection.”
The association is looking for a
“trail corridor” on hikeable land
(current laws forbidding
development within 15 metres of
the high-water mark are quite often
not enough), preserving viewscapes,
traditional land use, and an inland
buffer “to keep wilderness look
and feel.”
Under a mandate of building and
maintaining “a trail that’s free, open
and available to all,” the East Coast
Trail Association has already
opened about 230 km of fully
developed trail hugging the cliffs
and crossing the beaches from
Logy Bay to Cappahayden on the
Southern Shore.
There is another 320 km under
development, including segments
from Cappahayden south to
Trepassey, and north of St. John’s
to Topsail Beach. There are also
two major overland trails in the
works.
According to an economic impact
study commissioned by the
association, there were an estimated
26,500 hiker trips to the trail in
2004, generating $2.3 million in
gross expenditures at bed and
breakfasts, restaurants and other
attractions and services. The report
estimated that by 2011 the number
of hiker trips would reach 56,900.
Murphy says they’re on track to
reach that benchmark by 2009.
With trail segments ranging from
one- or two-hour easy ambles to
daylong (or overnight) strenuous
hikes, and attractions including sea
stacks, sea arches, the Spout (a
wave-driven geyser), stunning
vistas and plenty of wildlife, the
trail has found support at the
community, provincial, and federal
levels. The federal government has
invested more than $5 million in the
project — for trail construction
only; maintenance and operations
are done by volunteers — and the
province has added between 70,000
and $80,000 and its support.
While the trail was started by
hiking enthusiasts, there’s a deeper
motivation behind the organization
than plotting scenic walks along the
shore.
“The whole idea behind the trail
is how can we effectively support
our rural communities?” Murphy
says, pointing out the association
was born in the wake of the cod
moratorium.
“How can we work with
communities and the various
agencies to build a piece of tourism
infrastructure that we value for
years and years and have for future
generations? That’s what we’ve
been doing and we’re actually
succeeding.”
The association actively works
with the communities along the
trail, and is currently refocusing on
drawing more members. Annual
fees are $25; the association
currently has 500 members,
but would like to see 2,000 or more.
More than the money, the group
needs proof of commitment from
people up and down the coast to
upkeep the trail and help in land-use
negotiations and lobbying efforts.
“We’ve been dealing with
landowners and towns now for the
last 10 years,” Murphy says. “Every
time there’s an amendment to a
town plan or a town plan comes up
for renewal, we’re intervening …
and it’s constantly changing. You
may have a council that favours you
one year, and the next election,
there’s new councillors, different
mandates.
“It’s a huge effort for a volunteer
organization. We know we’re not
going to win here. The solution has
to come from the province.”
So far, Murphy says, the province
has been open to working with the
association, though change comes
slowly. There is a meeting set up in
November between the association
and the departments of tourism,
justice and municipal affairs, which
Murphy hopes will begin a solid
dialogue — and result in action.
Tourism Minister Tom
Hedderson says the meeting is “to
facilitate a process that would look
at the options” to overcoming “the
main obstacle (of) gaining more
access.
“It’s not an easy one to legislate.
I don’t know what kind of strategies
we could use there, but that’s
something we would certainly try to
facilitate.”
Hedderson supports what Murphy
and the association are doing.
“I would hope the public in
general would have public access to
the hundreds of kilometres of
coastline around Newfoundland and
Labrador,” he says. “I think that’s a
reasonable expectation.”
The East Coast Trail, and other
trails around the province, are “a
very important part of our tourism
product.
“The East Coast Trail as an
example, it’s a trail that covers a
great distance, great landscape, it’s
the kind of depth and distance
which appeals to a certain segment
of the hiking marketplace.”
Murphy is hoping to see some
solid commitments from the
province sooner rather than later.
The changing face, and focus, of
the province demands it.
“Over the past 500 years in
Newfoundland, we’ve had very
strong traditional rights of ways,”
Murphy says. “People allow people
across their property for berry
picking or hunting, and didn’t lay
down obstacles to keep them out.
“Now, take what’s happening in
our rural communities. You have
the youth exiting, the older people
staying and dying off or moving
away, and you’re getting new
people coming in. What was
traditionally understood in terms of
how to use land is changing. If we
don’t understand that and try to
manage it better, we’re going to lose
access to our coastlines and
wilderness areas.
“With the value of hope in our
lives, and you can’t be a
Newfoundlander without hope,
within the next year we’ll start
seeing a difference in terms of how
the province and towns are working
together with us to manage this.”
stephanie.porter@theindependent.ca
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