Close X
Saturday, October 5, 2024
ADVT 
National

Tourism And Business Losing Millions Over Cuts To BC Ferries

The Canadian Press , 17 Nov, 2014 02:47 PM
    VICTORIA — British Columbia's mid-Coast region has been hit hard by government ferry service cuts that threaten to turn the community of Bella Coola into a dead-end town, says the operator of an eco-friendly lodge in the remote Bella Coola Valley.
     
    Tweedsmuir Park Lodge owner Beat Steiner said Monday the impact of the service cuts was almost immediate this past summer, with passenger traffic down by about 50 per cent this year and some local businesses reporting losses of up to 90 per cent.
     
    The Transportation Ministry announced last November that route service changes to the Port Hardy to Bella Coola service included decommissioning the 115-vehicle capacity MV Queen of Chilliwack, which provided a direct weekly round trip and was a favourite of tourists.
     
    A service continued to the area last summer, but with the less furnished 16-vehicle MV Nimpkish and the large, open ocean MV Northern Expedition to create a connector route between Bella Coola and Port Hardy. The trip from Bella Coola to Bella Bella on board the Nimpkish has been criticized as a bare bones, milk-run service.
     
    Steiner said the route and service changes reduced visits on the Discovery Coast Circle Tour, which largely involved tourists, taking the Port Hardy to Bella Coola ferry, where they disembark and travel by vehicle across the central Interior to the Lower Mainland or the Rockies.
     
    "We need a ferry service into Bella Coola, otherwise it is essentially a dead-end community," said Steiner at a news conference attended by Opposition New Democrat Leader John Horgan. "There's such a loss of potential that it's staggering. On that route from Port Hardy, you are seeing whales and dolphins. Bella Coola is a stunning valley. It's one of the jewels of B.C."
     
    The West Chilcotin Tourism Association, of which Steiner is a member, commissioned an impact study that concluded tourism revenue has dropped by $3.9 million since the service cuts and has cost governments almost $1 million in lost tax revenues.
     
    Among the key findings of the Larose Research and Strategy report are: a decline of 46 per cent in same-day ridership between Port Hardy and Bella Coola from 4,995 passengers to 2,696 passengers; an estimated loss of 37 tourism jobs this year and the direct taxation loss to governments of $870,000.
     
    "It's a massive lost opportunity for tourism," Steiner said.
     
    Transportation Minister Todd Stone said he is prepared to review the study, but the government made the cuts because the Port Hardy to Bella Coola run was a money-loser at about $7 million annually. He said the route reductions are part of the commitment by the government and BC Ferries to keep ferry fares as low as possible.
     
    Stone said the Route 40 from Port Hardy to Bella Coola was being subsidized by $2,500 per vehicle and the replacement cost for the aging ferry was estimated at $100 million.
     
    "This report neglects to make any mention of a $100 million requirement to replace the Queen of Chilliwack," Stone said. "At a time when we are hearing from communities across coastal B.C. that fares are continuing to rise. These are the kinds of tough decisions government needs to make."
     
    Horgan called on Stone to review the decision to alter the routes and cut services to the central Coast.
     
    "It's been 12 months since the minister of transportation, without any consultation and without any assessment of the consequences of his actions, reduced services on the coast and eliminating Route 40 and downgrading the service for the discovery route," said Horgan. "This has had a profound impact."

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Card Game App Maker Who Faced Lawsuit Folds And Changes Name Of Download

    Card Game App Maker Who Faced Lawsuit Folds And Changes Name Of Download
    A Saskatchewan programmer says it's cheaper for him to simply call his Kaiser card game app something else rather than fight a lawsuit over the name.

    Card Game App Maker Who Faced Lawsuit Folds And Changes Name Of Download

    Proposed B.C. LNG project worth $40 billion

    Proposed B.C. LNG project worth $40 billion
    VICTORIA - A major player in British Columbia's liquefied natural gas sweepstakes has plans to spend up to $40 billion to build a proposed  export facility on the province's northern coast that could generate up to $39 billion in tax revenues over its lifespan.

    Proposed B.C. LNG project worth $40 billion

    Collision Between Train And Car Kills Abbotsford Man, Cuts Power

    Collision Between Train And Car Kills Abbotsford Man, Cuts Power
    A 36-year-old Abbotsford, B.C., man is dead after a train slammed into his car early Saturday. Const. Ian MacDonald with Abbotsford Police says several train cars were derailed by the collision, which happened just before 3 a.m.

    Collision Between Train And Car Kills Abbotsford Man, Cuts Power

    Gurupurab Radiothon raises $1.6 million for hospitals in Surrey and Calgary

    Gurupurab Radiothon raises $1.6 million for hospitals in Surrey and Calgary
    The South Asian communities of both Surrey and Calgary gave generously to two major hospitals on November 6, celebrating the birthday (Gurupurab) of Shri Guru Nanak Dev ji, the founder of the Sikh faith. The Radiothons were organized by RED FM, which operates two ethnic radio stations in Surrey and one in Calgary.

    Gurupurab Radiothon raises $1.6 million for hospitals in Surrey and Calgary

    Search Resumes In B.C. River For Missing Alberta Man Last Seen In Truck

    Search Resumes In B.C. River For Missing Alberta Man Last Seen In Truck
    TERRACE, B.C. — Recovery efforts are underway in Terrace, B.C., as searchers take advantage of better weather in an effort to find a missing Alberta man who was last seen in a truck in the Skeen River.

    Search Resumes In B.C. River For Missing Alberta Man Last Seen In Truck

    Sex Workers Say New Anti-prostitution Law Still Puts Them In Danger

    Sex Workers Say New Anti-prostitution Law Still Puts Them In Danger
    VANCOUVER — The Conservative government's new anti-prostitution law will continue to endanger the lives of people who work in the sex trade and in some cases make things worse, sex workers and advocates said Thursday as the law received royal assent.

    Sex Workers Say New Anti-prostitution Law Still Puts Them In Danger