About
Friends of Blue Mountain–Birch Cove Lakes was established in 2018 to expedite the process of the formation of one of Canada’s largest, urban wilderness parks.
Our Mission
To support and promote the creation and development of the Blue Mountain-Birch Cove Lakes Regional Park and to encourage the stewardship and appropriate use of the area.
Our Team
- Mary Ann McGrath (Chair)
- Eleanor Humphries (Vice-Chair)
- Diana Whalen (Secretary)
- Carol Ann Roberts (Treasurer)
- Dale Smith (Co-Chair – Planning)
- Mary Ellen Donovan (Co-Chair – Planning)
- John Bignell (Chair – Stewardship)
- Todd Beal (Chair – Communications)
- Wendy McDonald (Chair- Membership)
- James Boyer (Chair – Events)
- Ray Plourde (Member At Large)
- Pam Lovelace (Member At Large)
Our Partners
History
Compiled by Ecology Action Centre
The Blue Mountain-Birch Cove Lakes area is an amazing wilderness area on the edge of the largest city in the Maritimes. Made up of native Acadian forests, wetlands and an inter-connected system of headwater lakes, it has been accurately described as a mini Kejimkujik National Park.
1970’s - 1990’s
The Birch Cove Lakes area (circled in red below) has been recognized by the City of Halifax as an important natural area, rich in ecological features worth protecting, for nearly 50 years. The Metropolitan Area Planning Committee (MAPC) study of 1971 identifies the area as a high priority for conservation. The MAPC study also recommended a fledgling greenbelt for the city with a network of interconnected natural areas. Unfortunately, over the years little was done to actually implement that vision and, like so many other studies, it was put on a shelf to gather dust.
Fast-forward to the late 1990s when groups across the province came together to form the Nova Scotia Public Lands Coalition. Together they vigorously advocated for the completion of a network of protected Wilderness Areas and Nature Reserves across the province. This was to be Nova Scotia’s part in fulfilling Canada’s national conservation commitments at the famous Rio Earth Summit of 1992. It was accurately described in the media as a final battle to save Nova Scotia’s last remaining wild places, pitting resource exploitation against nature conservation.
19 high-conservation areas which were under immediate threat were identified and targeted for protection – including Blue Mountain-Birch Cove Lakes (circled in red). Public support for more protected areas was and remains high in Nova Scotia. And it’s no wonder – we’ve lost so much already.
2000 - 2009
In 2005, HRM hired consulting firm Environmental Design and Management Limited (EDM) to do a detailed assessment of the Blue Mountain-Birch Cove Lakes area for Regional Park consideration in the upcoming 2006 Regional Plan. The EDM study was delivered in 2006 and outlined appropriate park boundaries based on sound ecological and parks-planning principles. The study won a national planning award in 2007. Read the report here.
Following five years of planning, discussions, debates and detailed public consultations, the Halifax Regional Municipality passed the Regional Municipal Planning Strategy (RMPS). More commonly known as the Regional Plan, it is meant to guide how, and where and what kind of development will and will not be allowed over the next quarter century.
The Regional Plan committed to creating six Regional Parks within the 25-year timespan of the plan. All but one of these were identified simply as a red dot on a large map of the municipality (Map 4). Only one of the six Regional Parks – Blue Mountain-Birch Cove Lakes (circled in red) had any further definition or details. Those details were based on the award-winning parks planning study done by EDM in advance of the Regional Plan.
The Regional Plan presented a detailed map of the intended park (Map 13 and later, Map 11 in the five year review) showing the western boundary located along a natural ridgeline and encircling the Birch Cove Lakes. The area is made up of a combination of Provincial Crown land and privately owned land. None of these lands have development rights. They are zoned “urban Reserve” and are not to be considered for development during the 25-year Regional Plan (if ever). The Regional plan commits to acquiring the “necessary private lands” for the park (as shown on Map 11) and lists a number of methods for acquisition.
In October 2007 the provincial government announced the creation of a new protected Wilderness Area at Blue Mountain-Birch Cove Lakes. With strong encouragement from the Public Lands Coalition the province protects 1,350 hectares of Crown Land – a multimillion-dollar contribution to the City’s plan for a large wilderness Regional Park: The original Blue Mountain-Birch Cove Lakes Wilderness Area.
Then-Mayor Peter Kelly acknowledged the province’s contribution toward the City’s intended park in a press release. At a well-attended announcement event in Hammonds Plains on October 30, 2007, then Environment Minister Mark Parent also acknowledged the understanding that the province was making a major contribution to the City’s plan for the new Regional Park.
“The new Blue Mountain‑Birch Cove lakes wilderness area will complement HRM’s future regional park, identified in the HRM Regional Plan. (It) will also help limit HRM’s footprint of urban development and help to maintain air and water quality within HRM. It has an estimated 1.6 million trees and stores over two hundred thousand tons of carbon. That’s the equivalent of removing 50,000 vehicles from the road for one year.”
– Honourable Mark Parent Minister of Environment
But then, progress comes to a screeching halt!
Barely a year into the 25-year Regional Plan and despite the moratorium on development in the area, the landowners on the western side of the Birch Cove Lakes—The Annapolis Group and The Stevens Group—asked HRM to approve “Secondary Planning” for a sprawling subdivision all around the Birch Cove Lakes and right up to the boundary of the new Wilderness Area. If approved, their plan would effectively kill the Regional Park.
Then-Mayor of Halifax, Peter Kelly, also backtracked on commitments that HRM would move forward with land acquisition for the promised park. Former Minister of Environment, Mark Parent, publicly spoke out about this change in direction as the “height of political Machiavellianism”, emphasizing that the Regional Plan was discussed publicly on several occasions and that the commitments of the plan mean something and need to be implemented.
2010 - 2015
In November 2010, HRM Council deferred any consideration for Secondary Planning and instead ordered that a watershed study be done for the area and to begin negotiations with the developers/landowners for the necessary parkland through a “facilitated process”. The Birch Cove Lakes Watershed Study was completed by consulting firm AECOM and delivered to HRM in April 2013.
The watershed study shows that development of the lands west of the 102 Highway, including around the Birch Cove Lakes, would have a negative impact directly on these headwater lakes as well as a compounding negative downstream effect on lakes outside the intended park – specifically Kearny Lake and Paper Mill Lake, which are already under considerable stress from surrounding development.
A public meeting of over 300 people was held Thursday, May 31, 2012, at St. Peter’s Church Hall on Dakin Drive in Halifax to review planning work undertaken by City staff and provincial Protected Areas planners.
A more fleshed-out park plan was taking shape with a large natural core area called the “back-country” (in dark green below) made up largely of the provincial protected lands, and a more intensive use “front country” area (in light green), which would act as a buffer for the interior core and where services and amenities would be located. The park concept was very well received by the public. Following the public meeting, a detailed Staff Report was prepared for HRM’s Environment Committee and Council, but it was never presented after a letter was sent to the City by the developer’s lawyers vaguely suggesting legal action. After that, key City staff were removed from the file and all planning work on the park ceased.
Meanwhile, a major report from global consulting firm Stantec showed that if the HRM directed more residential growth toward the serviced core of the city and to regional growth centers (avoiding “greenfield” or “sprawl” developments of raw, undeveloped land outside the serviced areas), it could save millions of dollars.
Around this time the Our HRM Alliance – a coalition of over 50 groups from across the Halifax Regional Municipality – was formed to promote directing growth, reducing urban sprawl and protecting important natural areas around the urban core and regional centers through the concept of Greenbelting.
Lots of leading cities around the world have created greenbelts to protect important natural areas and resources from development and degradation. It’s high time Halifax had it’s own Greenbelt.
The Our HRM Alliance proposed a green network for HRM that would be the envy of the country – including protection of important lynchpin natural areas like Blue Mountain-Birch Cove Lakes, the Purcell’s Cove Backlands and the Sandy Lake area.
In 2014, as a result of the work of the Our HRM Alliance, a commitment was made in the Regional Plan’s 5-year review to develop a “Greenbelting and Public Open Space Priorities Plan”, also known as the Halifax Green Network Plan.
2015 - 2017
In late 2015, after years of scientific study and massive stakeholder consultations, the provincial government designated over 100 new protected areas across the province as part of its Parks and Protected Areas Plan, released in 2012.
As part of the new suite of protected areas, the provincial government added two more large chunks of land (coloured in bright orange) to the existing Blue Mountain-Birch Cove Lakes Wilderness Area (coloured in pink). Altogether the provincial contribution represents about 70% of the land needed for the long-promised Regional Park. Acquiring the rest of the necessary private lands is the City’ responsibility.
But then, progress comes to a screeching halt (again)!
In early June 2016 a terribly flawed Independent Facilitator’s Report was released siding 100% with the developers and against city staff and recommending that a sprawling suburb be allowed to be built INSIDE the proposed park boundaries and right up against the provincial Wilderness Area. The Report was soundly rejected in written submissions by over 1,500 citizens across HRM.
The Facilitator’s Report amazingly presents the developer’s “Development Map” as an acceptable way to create the Park. The developer’s map, although now in colour, is virtually identical to their 2007 development plan previously rejected by HRM. Once again it shows a huge sprawl development all around the Birch Coves Lakes and right up to the boundary of the provincially protected Wilderness Area. Compare this with the original black and while development map proposed by the developers in 2007. Either in colour or black and white the proposed subdivision is simply unacceptable and incompatible with the long-promised park.
Below is a map showing where the proposed development inside the park would be, coloured in red cross-hatch.
Below is a zoomed-in view showing the developer’s proposed sprawl subdivision all around the Birch Cove Lakes and right up against the provincial protected Wilderness Area. If approved this development would kill the Regional Park and badly compromise the ecological integrity of the Wilderness Area.
Greatly alarmed by Facilitator’s Report, a well-attended public meeting was held at Dalhousie University by the Ecology Action Centre, Halifax Field Naturalists, Canadian Association of Retired Persons, Halifax Northwest Trails Association and Friends of Nature Conservation Society. The Ondaatje Theatre was nearly full with over 300 people in attendance. Syd Dumaresq, president of Friends of Nature Conservation Society addresses the crowd. Deputy Premier and Clayton Park MLA Diana Whalen, a long-time supporter of the Park, brought greetings and support from the Provincial Government.
Dalhousie University professor Karen Beazly, from Dal’s School for Resource and Environmental Management and an acknowledged expert on parks and protected area design and management, addresses the problems with the proposed sprawl development and its impacts on the provincially protected Wilderness Area. Professor Beazly’s work found that if the subdivision were allowed to go ahead as planned (shown on right side with black outline) there would be no “buffer” or transition zone and the effective protected “core area” would shrink inward to a very small size (in the middle, cloured yellow) making it functionally useless for conservation objectives.
Former Minister of Environment, Mark Parent, who helped designate the Blue Mountain Birch Cove Lakes Wilderness Area was once again outspoken about the need for HRM to move forward with land acquisition and continue with the front country/back country concept, “The Crown land designated by the province was not to be the totality of the project, but a part of a much larger vision.”
Then-current Environment Minister Margaret Miller also weighed in, urging the City to reject the recommendations in the facilitators report and get on with completing the park. So did HRM Mayor Mike Savage.
Meanwhile the Halifax Green Network Plan was nearing completion and to no one’s surprise highlighted the Blue Mountain-Birch Cove Lakes as an indispensable area of high ecological value.
Finally, in September 2016, a major victory was won to protect Blue Mountain-Birch Cove Lakes from development!
Following a massive outpouring of public support for the park, HRM Council voted to reject the flawed facilitator’s report and instead to actually begin creating the long-promised Blue Mountain Birch Cove Lakes Regional Park!
Predictably, one of the developers filed a lawsuit against the City shortly thereafter, creating a freeze on further progress. Undaunted, the public, was determined to remain engaged and to champion the creation of the park. Following several well attended public meetings chaired by former Deputy Premier Diana Whalen and former MLA Mary Ann McGrath, a new not-for-profit society was formed: The Friends of Blue Mountain – Birch Cove Lakes.
2018 - 2020
Finally, in January 2018 the first ever parcel of private land was acquired by the city for the park. 80 hectares were purchased at Hobson Lake. And then in April 2019, HRM purchased another 130 hectares of land for the park in two parcels thanks in part to an $860,000 investment from the Federal Government. The long-awaited Regional Park was finally beginning to take shape.
That year, the Nova Scotia Nature Trust launched “Save The Wild Blue”, a campaign to save a large, critical linkage within Blue Mountain Birch Cove Lakes.
But in July 2020, an HRM staff report concluded that council should not dedicate $750,000 to the $2.6 million cost-shared purchase of a crucial piece of the long-promised park. Although the report largely provided a strong case for conserving the site, it also incorrectly stated that the land in question was not actually in the proposed BMBCL Regional Wilderness Park area, and that HRM couldn’t afford to contribute due to COVID-19-related financial constraints. This despite the fact that the city had nearly $6 million in a special Reserve Fund specifically earmarked for parkland acquisition.
Thankfully, on July 20, 2020, following the swift action of thousands of people living in and around the municipality, HRM Council voted unanimously to reject the staff report. In the same twelve-hour meeting, after some initial stalling by City Solicitor John Traves regarding technicalities, Council again voted unanimously to confirm the proposed park boundaries laid out in Map 11 of the Regional Plan.
The Bid To Become Canada's Next National Urban Park
Urban Wilderness Areas are specially designed to protect an area of land and/or water, support natural processes, species and habitat; and where human activities are primarily passive and do not compromise ecological function.
In August 2021, a statement of collaboration was signed between Halifax Regional Municipality and Parks Canada National Urban Parks Program to create a National Urban Park. Blue Mountain-Birch Cove Lakes is one of four sites shortlisted across Canada for this designation.
The new National Urban Park Program is a $130 million investment designed to support creating a network of national urban parks across Canada.
As part of Budget 2021’s investment of $2.3 billion in “Canada’s Nature Legacy,” funds earmarked to protect biodiversity, conserve nature, and create jobs in nature conservation, up to $130.9 million was set aside expressly to create a network of National Urban Parks in cities across the country.
Following the example of the Rouge National Urban Park, a protected wilderness of nearly 80 square kilometres on the eastern edge of Toronto, the program would set up a network of similar national parks, funded, managed and protected by Parks Canada, within the borders of major urban areas across the country. Saskatoon, Windsor and Winnipeg are also being evaluated. Each has signed statements of collaboration with Parks Canada to create National Urban Parks within their borders.
In 2023, Friends of Blue Mountain-Birch Cove Lakes developed a position paper that identifies challenges facing the wilderness area; making recommendations for the future. It also makes recommendations for park planning.
Challenges
Development Encroachment
Nova Scotia’s Wilderness Areas (WA) are intended to . . . protect representative (typical) examples of Nova Scotia’s natural landscapes, our native biological diversity, and outstanding natural features (NS Environment).
If that “protection” is to be sustainable over the coming years, how much development will be allowed in the lands immediately adjacent to the WA and if so, what will be the impact? Should developments be allowed to clear cut right to the the boundary lines in the Wilderness Area or HRM parkland? In our province, no other WA is being subjected to the levels of human encroachment more than that seen in Blue Mountain-Birch Cove Lakes. From all sides, housing and commercial development has occurred right up to the WA boundary.
This encroachment is easily seen on any of the newer maps as well as on the ground in locations such as Bedford West, Bayers Lake, and Kingswood subdivision.
Numerous empirical studies have shown that for the “biological diversity” to survive within a protected area requires not only the so designated lands but also the apron properties that act as buffers to the core.
Highway 113 Bypass
Principle goal: “. . . to provide a more efficient means of travel for motorists between Highway 103 and Highway 102, that bypasses the Halifax urban core and relieves congestion on the Hammonds Plains Road” (TIR Env. Assessment Report, 2006).
Acting as a divider between the two sections of the WA is the proposed, 113 bypass, a traffic corridor made up of public land that, for now, remains undeveloped. However, the plans remain “on the books” and interchanges and other accommodations for the 113 can be seen in all of the subdivision plans currently being submitted to HRM as well as those already completed such as Bedford West. All of the development on either end of the 113 bypass routing is being planned and built on the premise that this connector road will be completed at some point in the future.
The cost to build the 113 is estimated to be $10M/km which works out to about $100M in 2018 dollars. A lesser-priced option might also be considered, more along the lines of a four-lane street. The 113 is approved (with conditions) as a four-lane, controlled-access highway. Details can be found here.
This letter from the Woodens River Environmental Conservation Organization is typical of considerable public comment that has been contrary-minded to the construction of this highway. It provides many references to the need for unobstructed wildlife corridors.
Click on the image gallery below to see maps of this proposed Highway 113 bypass.
Banc Lands
Banc Lands Boundary Clearances & Access Planning
In 2013 HRM sold 88 acres at the southern corner of the Blue Mountain – Birch Cove Lakes (BMBCL) Regional Park to a private developer (BANC Commercial Holdings Limited). From the perspective of the Friends of BMBCL Society, this sale, adjacent to the retail properties on Chain Lake Drive in Bayers Lake Business Park, was extremely unfortunate. The subject property was the only land owned by HRM within or immediately adjacent to the proposed regional park and its sale and pending development for commercial and institutional purposes directly conflicts with the intent of the Muncipality’s 2006 Regional Plan and the 2014 plan update.
In apparent recognition of these concerns, an effort was made to minimize impacts on the abutting regional park land though the inclusion of two related conditions in the deed transferred to BANC, including Condition #11 which states:
“Applicants for construction on properties within the Property shall demonstrate to the satisfaction of HRM Real Estate & Facilities Services, that the proposed buildings and structures and location of development, will have a 20 foot no-build wilderness buffer along parkland border.”
As well, Condition #13 states:
“ Existing vegetation shall be retained wherever possible. . . . Development shall minimize the removal of native vegetation where possible. . .”
Trails
The existing trails within the WA and the adjacent lands are generally in poor condition. This is largely due to heavy use and no maintenance over a long period of time. Degredation, poor drainage, questionable routing and lack of any trails development plan have all contributed to the current state. However, the trails continue to be used and enjoyed year round by those with the ability to navigate what can best be described as challenging conditions.
NOTE: Provincially-designated wilderness areas typically do not have any managed trail systems. Most hiking trails on all sides of the BMBCL are the result of private citizen initiatives or have been in place for many years before the WA was created.
Conceptual Trail Plan
In 2015, a conceptual trail plan was completed by a committee made up of representatives from Halifax North-West Trails, Canadian Parks and Wilderness Society, and the Maskwa Aquatic Club. For many reasons, that plan, which was conditionally approved by NS Environment, remains on hold. As of February 2019, there is no trails group ready to revise the plan and take it to the next level.
The complete plan can be found here.
The Blue Mountain-Birch Cove Lakes Wilderness Area is comprised of two land areas that are defined separately; Blue Mountain–Birch Cove Lakes Wilderness Area, most often referred to as the “back country” and the lands surrounding the wilderness area or “front country”. However it will be difficult to differentiate these two land areas, as they will share boundaries.
The term, “front country” is not completely accurate as the wilderness area shares its boundary in many locations with existing development such as behind the Maskwa Aquatic Club at Bayers Lake. The interior of the wilderness area offers the best prospect for the long term sustainability of wildlife habitat and overall ecological stability.
The only land recognized as being actually added to what will make up the regional park is the Hobson Lake block, purchased by Halifax Regional Municipality (HRM) in January, 2018; the Barrett lands purchased in 2019; and the Armco property, also added in 2019. No overall park planning is known to be underway and no improvements such as trail construction or improvements have been made to any of these properties. HRM’s description and status of the proposed, regional park can be found here.