Showing posts with label #ontariotrailsact. Show all posts
Showing posts with label #ontariotrailsact. Show all posts

Monday, March 21, 2016

Ontario Trails News - OTC goes to landowners meeting to inform on truth of Bill 100

Ontario Trails Council attends Lanark Landowners meeting meets again to try and discuss next steps for trails and Bill 100
 

The Ontario Trails Council attended the Lanark and Navan Landowners meetings to reinforce our positions on the Bill and correct the misrepresentations that keep appearing in the media regarding the Bill . We continue to meet to discuss Bill 100, and to get our message out to the public to defense Bill 100 and reduce closure of trails.
  • The OTC remains committed to the passing of Bill 100
  • Our members are going to engage their members to work with landowners locally to correct the anxiety caused by misreporting of impacts
  • We gained greater insight into the working relationships some media have with the advocates against Bill 100
  • A Public Bill 100 education plan is being developed.
  • We have invited the Ontario Landowners Association and the Ontario Federation of Agriculture to speak at Trailhead Ontario in Calabogie June 19-21, 2016
  • the Ontario Federation of Agriculture has agreed to present at Trailhead Ontario in Calabogie June 19-21, 2016
  • The OTC Board passed a motion in support of trails safety, trespass deterrence, and in support of OFA. "The OTC supports the increase in trespass fines to a minimum penalty of 250.00." March 9, 2016.
Public meetings OTC encourages you to attend - the only way we can get the media to focus on the positive impacts of Bill 100 reduce the negative press is if we attend these meetings and express the benefits of the Act.

Mar 12 – OLA Community Meeting Almonte http://goo.gl/jykJbm
Apr 9th Simcoe County Meeting - http://goo.gl/Mgprkb

Please use our handouts and press releases to enable your information kit.


Farmers Forum Reports:

Trails bill won’t take your land, agriculture lawyer says

on: March 07, 2016In: Featured NewsNews
By Brandy Harrison
OTTAWA — Despite fears over new proposed legislation, landowners will still have the right to decide if snowmobilers or hikers can cut across their property on recreational trails, an Ottawa-based agriculture lawyer says.
Last month, an Ontario Landowners Association (OLA) commentary warned private property owners that they could lose their right to control their land if Bill 100 — Supporting Ontario’s Trails Act — is passed. The OLA suggested the bill misleads landowners and if they allow access to a snowmobile or hiking group through an easement, they effectively hand over their rights to that group. The bill is in second reading at Queen’s Park.
While the bill has problems, it doesn’t force landowners into easement agreements, says Kurtis Andrews, who operates an agricultural legal firm in Ottawa that serves all of Ontario. Basically, just don’t enter into an easement that mentions Bill 100 and you’re safe.
“It in no way is anything but voluntary. If landowners have trails and don’t want to subscribe to an easement, they don’t have to. A trail can stay on their property without having a legally-binding easement imposed,” he says, adding farmers can enter into a simple easement agreement without the new bill.
Under Bill 100, landowners can negotiate a time limit and restrictions, and when it comes to land, it has to be in writing — an easement can’t be registered without a property owner’s knowledge. But in rare cases in common law, an easement could be automatically established after 20 years.
But Andrews advises farmers to steer clear of agreeing to an easement filed at a land registry office that references Bill 100. “I see no value for landowners, period.”
Easements under Bill 100 can be transferred or granted via regulations, which can be created at a minister’s discretion and could lead to scenarios the landowner hasn’t thought of. “It’s a fill-in-the-blank. It’s dangerous,” Andrews says.
But the amendments to the Trespass to Property Act are one bright spot, he says.
While the Ontario Federation of Agriculture still wants minimum fines for trespassing and broader enforcement, public prosecution is no longer capped at $1,000 and the civil penalty would be raised from $2,000 to $10,000, Andrews says.
“It provides greater protection to a person allowing people on his land.”


Ontario Trails Council Responds - 
March 14, 2016

Letter to the Editor

Thanks to Farmers Forum for publishing your March 7th article “Trails bill won’t take your land, agricultural lawyer says.”, which actually says that your land won’t be taken by Bill 100.

Where was this comment Feb 6, or before?

Inflammatory rhetoric has scared landowners to close trail, because earlier news reports made, as it turns out, opinion as fact, and created false linkages between Bill 100 and land impacts, which as it turns out, didn’t exist as they said in the first place, according to the lawyer quoted in your article.

40 years of good work has been undone and we can’t figure out who benefits.

Bill 100 wasn't ever going to take your land, common law statute isn’t.

I think folks should watch out for special interests that come out with lawyers and advocates who display opinion as fact.

In order to educate the public the Ontario Trails Council holds an annual conference, this June 19-22 we are at Calabogie Peaks Resort and the Ontario Federation of Agriculture is presenting on trails and landowner relations.

For more information on Bill 100 go to Ontariotrails.ca and search media.

Patrick Connor
Executive Director, Ontario Trails Council. (A Registered Charity)

Friday, March 18, 2016

Ontario Trails News - Ontario Trails meets with landowners to discuss real facts about Bill 100

Ontario Trails Council attends Lanark Landowners meeting meets again to try and discuss next steps for trails and Bill 100
 

The Ontario Trails Council attended the Lanark and Navan Landowners meetings to reinforce our positions on the Bill and correct the misrepresentations that keep appearing in the media regarding the Bill . We continue to meet to discuss Bill 100, and to get our message out to the public to defense Bill 100 and reduce closure of trails.
  • The OTC remains committed to the passing of Bill 100
  • Our members are going to engage their members to work with landowners locally to correct the anxiety caused by misreporting of impacts
  • We gained greater insight into the working relationships some media have with the advocates against Bill 100
  • A Public Bill 100 education plan is being developed.
  • We have invited the Ontario Landowners Association and the Ontario Federation of Agriculture to speak at Trailhead Ontario in Calabogie June 19-21, 2016
  • the Ontario Federation of Agriculture has agreed to present at Trailhead Ontario in Calabogie June 19-21, 2016
  • The OTC Board passed a motion in support of trails safety, trespass deterrence, and in support of OFA. "The OTC supports the increase in trespass fines to a minimum penalty of 250.00." March 9, 2016.
Public meetings OTC encourages you to attend - the only way we can get the media to focus on the positive impacts of Bill 100 reduce the negative press is if we attend these meetings and express the benefits of the Act.

Mar 12 – OLA Community Meeting Almonte http://goo.gl/jykJbm
Apr 9th Simcoe County Meeting - http://goo.gl/Mgprkb

Please use our handouts and press releases to enable your information kit.


Farmers Forum Reports:

Trails bill won’t take your land, agriculture lawyer says

on: March 07, 2016In: Featured NewsNews
By Brandy Harrison
OTTAWA — Despite fears over new proposed legislation, landowners will still have the right to decide if snowmobilers or hikers can cut across their property on recreational trails, an Ottawa-based agriculture lawyer says.
Last month, an Ontario Landowners Association (OLA) commentary warned private property owners that they could lose their right to control their land if Bill 100 — Supporting Ontario’s Trails Act — is passed. The OLA suggested the bill misleads landowners and if they allow access to a snowmobile or hiking group through an easement, they effectively hand over their rights to that group. The bill is in second reading at Queen’s Park.
While the bill has problems, it doesn’t force landowners into easement agreements, says Kurtis Andrews, who operates an agricultural legal firm in Ottawa that serves all of Ontario. Basically, just don’t enter into an easement that mentions Bill 100 and you’re safe.
“It in no way is anything but voluntary. If landowners have trails and don’t want to subscribe to an easement, they don’t have to. A trail can stay on their property without having a legally-binding easement imposed,” he says, adding farmers can enter into a simple easement agreement without the new bill.
Under Bill 100, landowners can negotiate a time limit and restrictions, and when it comes to land, it has to be in writing — an easement can’t be registered without a property owner’s knowledge. But in rare cases in common law, an easement could be automatically established after 20 years.
But Andrews advises farmers to steer clear of agreeing to an easement filed at a land registry office that references Bill 100. “I see no value for landowners, period.”
Easements under Bill 100 can be transferred or granted via regulations, which can be created at a minister’s discretion and could lead to scenarios the landowner hasn’t thought of. “It’s a fill-in-the-blank. It’s dangerous,” Andrews says.
But the amendments to the Trespass to Property Act are one bright spot, he says.
While the Ontario Federation of Agriculture still wants minimum fines for trespassing and broader enforcement, public prosecution is no longer capped at $1,000 and the civil penalty would be raised from $2,000 to $10,000, Andrews says.
“It provides greater protection to a person allowing people on his land.”


Ontario Trails Council Responds - 
March 14, 2016

Letter to the Editor

Thanks to Farmers Forum for publishing your March 7th article “Trails bill won’t take your land, agricultural lawyer says.”, which actually says that your land won’t be taken by Bill 100.

Where was this comment Feb 6, or before?

Inflammatory rhetoric has scared landowners to close trail, because earlier news reports made, as it turns out, opinion as fact, and created false linkages between Bill 100 and land impacts, which as it turns out, didn’t exist as they said in the first place, according to the lawyer quoted in your article.

40 years of good work has been undone and we can’t figure out who benefits.

Bill 100 wasn't ever going to take your land, common law statute isn’t.

I think folks should watch out for special interests that come out with lawyers and advocates who display opinion as fact.

In order to educate the public the Ontario Trails Council holds an annual conference, this June 19-22 we are at Calabogie Peaks Resort and the Ontario Federation of Agriculture is presenting on trails and landowner relations.

For more information on Bill 100 go to Ontariotrails.ca and search media.

Patrick Connor
Executive Director, Ontario Trails Council. (A Registered Charity)

Friday, March 11, 2016

Ontario Trails Council - Trailwise, OTC Board meet to discuss Bill 100 and clarifies the Act and its impacts

Ontario Trails Council Board meets again to discuss next steps for trails and Bill 100
 

The Ontario Trails Council Board met March 9, 2016 to discuss Bill 100, damaging media opinion pieces and our next steps.
  • The OTC remains committed to the passing of Bill 100
  • Our members are going to engage their members to work with landowners locally to correct the anxiety caused by misreporting of impacts
  • We gained greater insight into the working relationships some media have with the advocates against Bill 100
  • A Public Bill 100 education plan is being developed.
  • We have invited the Ontario Landowners Association and the Ontario Federation of Agriculture to speak at Trailhead Ontario in Calibogie June 19-21, 2016
  • the Ontario Federation of Agriculture has agreed to present at Trailhead Ontario in Calibogie June 19-21, 2016
  • The OTC Board passed a motion in support of trails safety, trespass deterrence, and in support of OFA. "The OTC supports the increase in trespass fines to a minimum penalty of 250.00." March 9, 2016.
Please see the itinerary of our efforts below.Media on the Issue this week
March 9th Board Meeting
Mar 2 – Brantford Expositor - http://goo.gl/yYOp62
Mar 4th – North Bay Nugget – Jim Merriam article
Mar 4th – Cochrane MPP speaks to Bill “was not bad, just wants to make sure people understand the Bill – Troy Storms NBCA
Mar4th – Telephone call with OFA – Peter Jeffery – sorted out positions – OFA speaking at Trailhead Ontario as a result.
Mar 4th – Interview with Owen Sound News – no coverage
Mar 5th – interview with London Free Press - http://goo.gl/EsQKxz
Mar 5th – interview with Arthur Neitzel Eganville Sno-Drifters – letters will be forwarded to the Eganville Leader News
Mar 7th – Grey Bruce News – from John Howard
Mar 9th – Manitoulin Expositor – Elizabeth Marshall – opinionhttp://www.manitoulin.ca/2016/03/09/ontario-landowners-stick-guns-interpretation-bill-100/

Public meetings OTC encourages you to attend - the only way we can get the media to focus on the positive impacts of Bill 100 reduce the negative press is if we attend these meetings and express the benefits of the Act.

Mar 12 – OLA Community Meeting Almonte http://goo.gl/jykJbm
Apr 9th Simcoe County Meeting - http://goo.gl/Mgprkb

Please use our handouts and press releases to enable your information kit.

Ontario Trails Council continues to track erroneous landowner reporting on Bill 100


Press Release ontario trails council bilingual logo
For immediate release: March 4, 2016                                                                                    
 
Contact:  Patrick Connor, Executive Director
Ontario Trails Council
1-613-396-3226  execdir@ontariotrails.ca
 
Ontario Trails Council Continues to Correct Misinformation about Bill 100
 
The Ontario Trails Council has asked the Ontario Landowners Association to cease or retract misinformation regarding Bill 100, that they continue to circulate through public meeting and the media. We also would ask the media to cease and desist as the information they are provided is being misunderstood.
 
Several respected groups, the Minister of Tourism Culture and Sport, community organizations involving farmers to hikers, and even MPP Randy Hillier (founder of the Ontario Landowners Association) and our organization, wants the closure of trails to stop. We respect landowners and we want to preserve 50 years of friendly relations amongst us.
 
Bill 100 only needs some tweaks and clarifications and this can be done by the OLA, and other groups, working through the OTC.
 
Reports from “The Lanark Era,” have “Randy Hillier Member for Lennox-Addington-Frontenac in Provincial Parliament saying the landowners’ group has misled the public on the benefits and drawbacks of Bill 100, which, in part, would regulate easements on private property.”
 
The OTC is looking to get additional support for other landowner agreements, recognized in the Bill.
 
Further MPP Hillier, “stressed that Bill 100, which has made it through first reading and has yet to be debated, is a positive bill for property owners and land users…” “It creates a new legal mechanism that provides greater certainty to trail associations and to private landowners over the use of land,” Hillier explained.
 
At Ontario Trails Council we are working with Ministry Staff, and through committee, to bring to the Bill changes that will work for trails and landowners. At OTC we are moving forward through communication with the government to secure a positive outcome for all.
 
Despite published clarifications on the part of the Ontario Trails Council and the government, some people and their media partners continue to do damage to trails. Please review our input and work with us to change the Act for the better.
 
OTC Press Release
 
https://www.scribd.com/doc/299473575/Hillier-pans-landowner-views-on-provincial-trails-bill#download
 
If you have any questions about Bill 100 please contact the Ontario Trails Council, 613-396-3226 or email us at: execdir@ontariotrails.ca
 
We are here to help everybody have a better understanding of trails, trail use and management practice.
 
Please read our paper on Bill 100 – it's available here -http://goo.gl/yzlO0X
 
-30-
 

Ontario Trails Council Educational Posters

Tuesday, March 8, 2016

Ontario Trails Council - asks media to distribute true facts about Bill 100

Ontario Trails Council contacts Media, distributes content to members and third parties
 

At Ontario Trails Council we've done more on Bill 100 this week. We've been on the phone with trail groups, landowners, the media and government officials. We've worked to clarify the issue, we were contacted on the weekend before the story broke big and we think we helped reduce the loss of trail through our effort. Please support this by:
  • Contact your MP and ask them to support Bill 100
  • Contact your Regional Trails Committee and ask them to support Bill 100
  • Send the OTC Press Release to area trail and landowners to clarify the issue
  • Most importantly - understand what the landowners concerns are and listen to them. If we respond as good neighbours they will understand trail folks are good folks
  • Talk to other trail users and tell them - don't trespass, respect private property - that saves trails!


Ontario Trails Council asks media  - please stop circulating incorrect coverage https://goo.gl/1YITa8
 
“Something that bothers me as a rural property owner is forced easement. If I have an agreement with my neighbour or snowmobile club that is exactly what it is, an agreement,” said Karen Mahon, a West Perth landowner. “An easement on the other hand is registered and runs with the land. You cannot get out of it. That is mentioned in Bill 100 and is easement law.”

Not forced. To continue to publish this is just wrong.

"But according to Elizabeth Marshall, the director of research for the Ontario Landowners Association, Bill 100 would lead private property owners into thinking they can allow trails across their property while retaining the right to shut those trails down. Shutting trails down that have been registered as easements under Bill 100 would not be as easy as it is through direct agreements, Marshall claimed."

There is no leading, this is a position the landowner can pursue of their own volition.

We request that media outlets stop publishing comments that are opinion and that are scaring landowners. The OTC has done interviews with these publishers clarifying our position, the Act and our go forward strategy, as well as getting our Press Release to them.

Know your easement and we are working with landowners to make sure the types of agreements are better understood and enacted by them.
 

Monday, March 7, 2016

Ontario Trails News - London Free Press gets it closest to the mark in reporting on Bill 100


http://goo.gl/EsQKxz
Concerns about Ontario’s proposed Trails Act are, like the trails themselves during spring thaw, “a mess right now.”
That’s the word from farmers and trail advocates who say a provincial bill that would draw together a disparate tangle of rules into one law has received widespread misinterpretation.
The Ontario Trails Act is intended to codify for the first time how public trails are proposed and approved on private land.
But some have said the bill encroaches on landowners’ freedoms — something Ontario Federation of Agriculture president Don McCabe says just isn’t the right interpretation.
“The reality is if you own a farm and somebody wants to go through it (with a trail), you have to sign off on it,” McCabe said.
It’s purely voluntary, he said, and he dismissed as false some claims that farmers risk having their land expropriated for trails.
Patrick Connor, executive director of the Ontario Trails Council, said it could take years to recover from the rhetoric.
“It’s not bad legislation for landowners. It’s not. It’s actually an improvement for landowners,” Connor said.
He said the proposed legislation, Bill 100, draws provisions now under 48 different pieces of legislation into one coherent set of rules.
The intent, he said, is to help build trails that offer recreation for users and legal safeguards for landowners. “This isn’t an us-versus-them agenda,” he said.
There are more than 30,000 kilometres of year-round trails in Ontario, plus tens of thousands of seasonal snowmobile trails.
Many of them run through or adjacent to private land, where farmers have allowed easements.
It says any landowner may agree to an easement, but doesn’t insist that such permission be given, said Neil Currie, general manager of the Ontario Federation of Agriculture.
“It’s a bit of a confused mess right now,” he said.
Connor said when landowners designate an area for trails, it can lead to less land damage because trail-walkers and -riders will know where the parameters are.
Farmers are often vexed by people in four-wheelers driving through their fields. There are also concerns that people entering a property without permission will jeopardize biosecuruity measures on famrs.
Currie said he has seen photos of someone ripping through a field of soybeans, in summer, with a snowmobile.
He said that exemplefies the lack of respect some people have for private property and the damage that can be done.
OFA says trespassing penalties should be toughened beyond the current maximum $50 fine, perhaps re-defining the maximum penalty as $20,000, the maximum amount that can be collected under small-claims legislation.
“Offering land for a trail to the public is a courtesy that the public has to return,” Currie said.
The bill has passed second reading in the legislature and will go to committees before a final reading.

Friday, March 4, 2016

Ontario Trails News - OTC Board meets to continue to press for accurate reporting on Bil 100 impacts

Ontario Trails Council Board meets to discuss next steps for trails and Bill 100

trail closure sign

Photo from Tom Friesen
 
The Ontario Trails Council Board met to discuss Bill 100, damaging media opinion pieces and our next steps.
  • The OTC remains committed to the passing of Bill 100
  • Our members are going to engage their members to work with landowners locally to correct the anxiety caused by misreporting of impacts
  • We gained greater insight into the working relationships some media have with the advocates against Bill 100
  • A Public Bill 100 education plan is being developed.
  • We have invited the Ontario Landowners Association and the Ontario Federation of Agriculture to speak at Trailhead Ontario in Calibogie June 19-21, 2016
Please see the itinerary of our efforts below.Media on the Issue
Feb 5 2016 ‐ Local Landowners ‐ http://goo.gl/OLnlDX
Feb 6 2016 ‐ OLA http://goo.gl/b4uTGx ‐
Feb 8 2016 OTC Press Release ‐ http://goo.gl/f4PGmJ
Feb 9 2016 OTC sector talks ‐ various, HO, BT, OFATV, KATVA, OFSC, IMBA, CO, HBTC
Feb 10 ‐ Minister Coteau Statement ‐ http://goo.gl/Wqca46
Feb 15 OLA http://goo.gl/NIyAcK ‐
Feb 15 2016 OTC Covered in Better Farming ‐ http://goo.gl/ocYscb
Feb 15 2016 OLA refuted in Lanark Era ‐ https://goo.gl/m8By1N
Feb 18, 2016 OTC at Queen’s Park in support of Bill 100 ‐ https://goo.gl/8hzFu1
Feb 19 2016 OTC ADM Harlow Teleconference
Feb 19 2016 Ontario Federation of Agriculture Statement ‐ http://goo.gl/6LyFSC
Feb 22, 2016 OTC OLA Meeting ‐ teleconference 2 hours
Feb 22, 2016 OLA http://goo.gl/VlzBzK ‐
Feb 23, 2016 OTC Ministers Staff Teleconference
Feb 24, 2016 OTC Bruce Trails teleconference
Feb 24 2016 OLA Media ‐ http://goo.gl/y3NWuy
Feb 25, 2016 OTC MTCS Trails Act staffs Teleconference ‐ Bill 100 Legal
Feb 25, 2016 OTC Press Release ‐ http://goo.gl/L8iBif
Feb 26 2016 Hike Ontario points covered by Ontario Farmer ‐ link pending
Mar 1, 2016 OLA http://goo.gl/0XerlK ‐
Mar 1, 2016 OTC responds to OLA ‐ http://goo.gl/0XerlK ‐
Mar 3 2016 Board meeting

Ontario Trails Council continues to track erroneous landowner reporting on Bill 100


Press Release
For immediate release: Feb 25, 2016                        ontario trails council bilingual logo
Contact:  Patrick Connor, Executive Director
Ontario Trails Council
1-613-396-3226  execdir@ontariotrails.ca
 
Ontario Trails Council Continues to Correct Misinformation about Bill 100
 
The Ontario Trails Council has asked the Ontario Landowners Association to cease or retract misinformation regarding Bill 100, that they continue to circulate through public meeting and the media. We also would ask the media to cease and desist as the information they are provided is being misunderstood.
 
Several respected groups, the Minister of Tourism Culture and Sport, community organizations involving farmers to hikers, and even MPP Randy Hillier (founder of the Ontario Landowners Association) and our organization, wants the closure of trails to stop. We respect landowners and we want to preserve 50 years of friendly relations amongst us.
 
Bill 100 only needs some tweaks and clarifications and this can be done by the OLA, and other groups, working through the OTC.
 
Reports from “The Lanark Era,” have “Randy Hillier Member for Lennox-Addington-Frontenac in Provincial Parliament saying the landowners’ group has misled the public on the benefits and drawbacks of Bill 100, which, in part, would regulate easements on private property.”
 
The OTC is looking to get additional support for other landowner agreements, recognized in the Bill.
 
Further MPP Hillier, “stressed that Bill 100, which has made it through first reading and has yet to be debated, is a positive bill for property owners and land users…” “It creates a new legal mechanism that provides greater certainty to trail associations and to private landowners over the use of land,” Hillier explained.
 
At Ontario Trails Council we are working with Ministry Staff, and through committee, to bring to the Bill changes that will work for trails and landowners. At OTC we are moving forward through communication with the government to secure a positive outcome for all.
 
Despite published clarifications on the part of the Ontario Trails Council and the government, some people and their media partners continue to do damage to trails. Please review our input and work with us to change the Act for the better.
 
OTC Press Release
 
https://www.scribd.com/doc/299473575/Hillier-pans-landowner-views-on-provincial-trails-bill#download
 
If you have any questions about Bill 100 please contact the Ontario Trails Council, 613-396-3226 or email us at: execdir@ontariotrails.ca
 
We are here to help everybody have a better understanding of trails, trail use and management practice.
 
Please read our paper on Bill 100 – it's available here -http://goo.gl/yzlO0X
 
-30-
 

Thursday, March 3, 2016

Ontario Trails News - despite negative media - we are forging ahead with our conferences to enlighten and educate the public!

trailhead ontario

Trailhead Ontario - Renfrew 2016

Trailhead Ontario Itinerary - June 20, 21, 22, 2016 ( we are adding a third day for Eastern Canada Trails Training the only federally sponsored trail training in Eastern Canada this year - provided by IMBA Canada)
Monday
 
 
8:30-9:00AM
Registration
Coffee Served
9:00-9:15AM
Welcome remarks
Dignitaries
9:15-10:00AM
Presentation
Ontario Landowners Association (Invited)
10:00-10:30AM
Presentation
Ontario's Highlands Tourism Organization
10:30-10:45AM
Break
Coffee Break
10:45-11:15AM
Presentation
Petawawa - the development of our Regional Trail Association
11:15-11:45AM
Presentation
Adirondack to Algonquin Trail Development
11:45-12:15PM
Presentation
Parks of the St. Lawrence
12:15-1:00 PM
Lunch
 
1:00-2:00PM
Presentation
Updates on the Trails Act and the Ontario Trails Strategy
with the Ministry of Tourism Culture and Sport
2:00-2:30PM
Presentation
City of Ottawa Trails
2:30-2:45PM
Break
Coffee Break
2:45-3:15PM
Presentation
3:15-3:45PM
Presentation
3:45-4:15PM
Presentation
4:15-4:45PM
Presentation
Understanding and Preventing Lyme Disease
4:45-5:15PM
Presentation
Sentiers Prescott Russell and Glengarry Trails
5:15-6PM
Networking
Cash Bar
6PM - 9PM
Dinner & Keynote Speaker
Federal Climate Change Initiatives and Trails
 
 
 
Tuesday
 
 
8:30 – 9:00AM
Registration
Coffee Served
9:00-9:15 AM
Welcome remarks
Dignitaries - Madawaska Valley
9:15-9:45AM
Presentation
Madawaska Valley and Township Trail Developments
10:00-10:30AM
Plenary Session
Principles of Trail Risk Management
10:30-10:45AM
Coffee Break
 
10:45-11:30AM
Plenary Session
Trails Risk Management - How to Say Yes to Trails
Noon-1PM
Lunch
Networking Lunch
1:00-2:00PM
Plenary Session
Water Trails - Developing trails for Use
2:00-2:45PM
Plenary Session
Ottawa River-Keeper - programs and plans for development
2:45-3:00PM
Break
 
3:00-3:30PM
Plenary Session
Hunting and Fishing Trail Use of MNRF Lands
3:30-4:00PM
Plenary Session
Mattawa Trail Development
4:00-4:30PM
Plenary Session
First Nation Tourism and Trails
4:30PM
Wrap-up and Next Steps
Trailhead Canada 2017!


Trailhead North - Marathon
 
Trailhead North Symposium Itinerary - April 20, 21, 2016
Event Outdoor Hike with Pic River First Nation - REGISTER
Wednesday
 
 
Presenters
8:30 - 9:00AM
Registration
 
 
9:00-9:30AM
Welcome remarks
Coffee Served
Mayor Dumas and Chief Michano
9:30-10:30AM
Marathon, Pic River and our Northern Trails
Sponsor
Bob Hancherow, and Chief Duncan Michano Pic River FN
10:30-10:45AM
Break
 
 
10:45-12:30AM
Presentation
Parks Experiences - Pukaskwa National Park and Neys Provincial
Roel Teunissen, Park Planning, Ontario Parks. Sharon Hayes, Pukaskwa National Park.
 
Presentation
Group of Seven Trail
Kirsten Spence, Quercwood Consulting
 PresentationNorthern Ontario ExperiencesCarole Caputo and Paul Pepe, Director of Tourism Thunder Bay
12:30-1:00 PM
Lunch
 
 
1:00 - 1:30PM
Presentation
Ministry of Tourism Culture and Sport
 Jim Antler and Carol Oitment
1:30 - 2:00PM
Presentation
Trans Canada Trail
Mike Goodyear, Trail Director Trans Canada Trail
2:00-2:30PM
Presentation
Path of the Paddle and Trail Auditing
Carrie Nolan, Executive Director POPA
2:30-2:45PM
Break
Trans Canada Trail Ontario - Sponsor
 
2:45-3:15PM
Presentation
Importance of Trails for Northern Ontario Tourism
David McLaughlan and Susan Forrest, NOT
3:15-3:45PM
Presentation
World Class Cross Country - Destination Marathon
Marathon X-Country Ski, Dr. David Juliano
 3:45-4:15PM
Presentation
Northern Snowmobile Trails
Dennis Burns with Craig Colbourne
4:15-4:45 PM
Presentation
OAC - Ontario Access Coalition - Places to Climb
Jana Wells
 
Break
 
 
5:30-6PM
Networking
Cash Bar
 
6:00PM - 9:00PM
Dinner & Keynote Speaker
Trails, Travels and Experiences, A personal perspective
Michael Haynes, Trails Ambassador and Author
 
Silent Auction
 
 
Thursday
 
 
 
8:30 - 9AM
Registration
Coffee Served
 
9:00-9:15 AM
Welcome remarks
 
Kirsten Spence, Patrick Connor
9:15-10AM
Presentation
Funding for Trails with NOHFC, FedNor and Ontario Trillium Foundation
Maureen Brophy OTF,  Sean Irwin NOHFC, and Jamie Taylor FedNor
10:00-10:15AM
Break
Coffee Break
 
10:15-11:15 AM
Presentation
Aboriginal Tourism Ontario Summit Report
Kevin Eshkawkogan, Aboriginal Tourism Summit
11:15-Noon
Presentation
Hunting and Fishing Trail Use of MNRF Lands
Greg Farrant, Ontario Federation of Anglers and Hunters with Greg Rivard
Noon-1PM
Lunch
Networking Lunch
 
1:00-2:00PM
Presentation
Outfitters and Tripping - How to Get North
 Steve Bruno, Ontario Tourism Marketing Partnership
2:00-3:00PM
Presentation
Voyageur Trail - Developments along the Trail
Carole Blacquiere, President VTA
3:00-3:45PM
Presentation
 Outdoor Recreation - the Tourism Experience
Dr. Harvey Lemelin, Lakehead University
 3:45-$:00PM
Wrap-up and Next Steps
 
Kirsten Spence, Patrick Connor
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
As at 11/2/2016 Program content subject to change based on availability.


Trailhead Georgian Bay

May 11th, Killarney Park Lodge.
Wednesday
 
 
Presenters
8:30 - 9:00AM
Registration
 
 
9:00-9:30AM
Welcome remarks
Coffee Served
Kirsten Spence, Patrick Connor
9:30-10:30AM
About The Georgian Bay Coast Trail
Sponsor
GBCT Board
10:30-10:45AM
Break
 
 
10:45-12:15AM
Presentation
Killarney Provincial Park - A Lead Partner in Development
Killarney Provincial Park
 
Presentation
Friends of Killarney
Friends of Killarney
 
 Presentation
Trail Experiences - Explorer's Edge
James Murphy, RTO12
 
 Presentation
Auditing and Planning our Route
Niall Lobely
12:15-1:00 PM
Lunch
 
 
1:00 - 2:00PM
Presentation
Ministry of Tourism Culture and Sport
Carol Oitment
 
 Presentation
Indigenous Peoples Economic Development
Local First Nations
2:00-2:30PM
Presentation
Trail Inventories Georgian Bay Partners
 Kirsten Spence
2:30-2:45PM
Break
Trans Canada Trail Ontario - Sponsor
 Al McPherson
2:45-3:15PM
Presentation
Importance of Variety of Trails
GBBR and GBCR
 3:15-3:45PM
Presentation
Great Lakes Guardian Plant and Trail Inventory
 Henvy Inlet and Ontario Trails
3:45-4:15PM
Presentation
Ministry of Natural Resources and Forestry
Local MNRF
4:15-4:45 PM
Presentation
Relations with Local Landowners
Georgian Bay Landowners Association
4:45 - 5:15
Wrap-up
Thanks
GBCT
As at 11/2/2016 Program content subject to change based on availability.

 
Trails Talk

Join us every other Tuesday at 1pm EST for a lively half hour discussion on trail issues of importance to the trails community. We are pleased to have added an additional topic to the Agenda - see January 12th.
We will be using our Google Hangout to facilitate our Trail Talks. So make sure you have a gmail account and the hangout app added to your gplus account.

How to Join a Hangout

Invited presenters include:
February 16th, 2016 - Explorer's Edge - all about the great trails in RTO 12 with James Murphy of Explorer's Edge. Register on Eventbrite
March 1, 2016 - The Georgian Bay Coast Trail - who supports it, what is happening and all about our spring community meeting in Killarney. With Luke Wassegijig and Kirsten Spence. Register on Eventbrite
March 15, 2016 - Trans Canada Trail - with Jane Murphy and Al McPherson. You've heard about it, how is it progressing? How can you support it? Register on Eventbrite
March 29, 2016 - Hiking, what is it? Who does it? What you need to know about community programs, and trail leadership programs - with Bill Mungall Register on Eventbrite
April 12th, 2016 - Trail Building - are you interested? What is trail building all about? Who does it and the skills you need, with stories from trail builder Zane Davies. Register on Eventbrite