Part of the Land
Canada is a land of rivers. White ribbons cascading through endless
boreal forest. Silver ribbons sliding down broad, glacier-carved
valleys. Meandering muddy rivers sweeping across the prairies. Ribbons
of green linking a labyrinth of lakes, ponds and bogs on the Canadian
Shield. Sparkling brooks cascading to the ocean. Rivers are everywhere
imprinted on the Canadian landscape – and in the hearts and
minds of its people.
Part of Our Heritage
Canada is a nation with a rich river heritage. Rivers molded this
country and its peoples. We use rivers as travel routes and as a
source of livelihood. We swim and fish in their waters, are challenged
by their rapids and wilderness, find peace of mind and solitude
along their shores. Rivers are part of our lives and our dreams.
Rivers are the threads that weave together the natural and human
elements of Canada.
But many of our rivers have been severely impacted by dams, diversions,
pollution and development. As a result, much of our river heritage
is threatened and may be lost forever.
The Canadian Heritage Rivers System
The Canadian Heritage Rivers System (CHRS) is Canada's national
river conservation program. It promotes, protects and enhances Canada's
river heritage, and ensures that Canada's leading rivers are managed
in a sustainable manner. Responsible river stewardship is the ethic
it engenders. Cooperation and public support are the strengths it
builds upon.
The CHRS is a public trust. Local citizens champion the program.
Actions taken are grass roots driven. Governments -- federal, provincial
and territorial -- lend support and guidance, and provide approvals
as required. Communities, Aboriginal Peoples, landowners, and other
stakeholders have their rights and concerns respected. These cornerstones
make the CHRS an open and effective forum for collaboration and
partnership on river conservation.
Canada honours and respects its leading rivers by distinguishing
them as Canadian Heritage Rivers -- places a great pride and importance
to Canadians. Having outstanding natural and/or cultural values,
and offering quality recreational opportunities, these rivers showcase
the benefits and enjoyment of healthy river environments, now and
in the future. Rivers in the CHRS must have their heritage values
and integrity protected. Every river named to the CHRS strengthens
our identity as Canadians, and enables us to better understand,
appreciate and celebrate our rich river heritage.
The CHRS is administered by the Canadian Heritage Rivers Board,
comprised of members appointed by federal, provincial and territorial
governments. The Board is governed by a Charter, affirming the Board's
role in overseeing the development and operation of the program.
A ten-year strategic plan, reviewed annually by the Board, sets
over-arching goals and objectives, defining a blueprint for the
future. A Technical Planning Committee reports to the Board on planning-related
matters.
Importantly, the CHRS has no legislative authority. Voluntary participation,
partnership, cooperation and community involvement are what drive
it. It is within this spirit of trust and goodwill that governments
pledge to work in partnership with the public and one another to
build a system that truly reflects the diversity and beauty of Canada's
rivers. Government retain their traditional jurisdictional powers
and management responsibilities throughout this process.
Canada's network of rivers is vast and diverse. Canadian Heritage
Rivers are its gems, beacons of our natural and cultural heritage.
Guidelines exist to ensure that candidate rivers meet the selection
and integrity criteria that define Canada's leading rivers. It is
not easy to become a Canadian Heritage River. The process is rigorous
and lengthy. A river must be proven to posses the requisite natural
values, historical importance and recreational potential. Strong
public support must also be demonstrated.
Protecting River Heritage
The CHRS was established in 1984 by the federal, provincial and
territorial governments to conserve and protect the best examples
of Canada’s river heritage, to give them national recognition,
and to encourage the public to enjoy and appreciate them. It is
a cooperative program of the governments of Canada, all 10 provinces,
and the three territories. A 15-member national board administers
the program. This board is made up of private citizens and senior
officials from government departments responsible for the protection
of the Canadian environment.
The first Canadian Heritage River was the French River in Ontario,
designated in 1986. Today, there are 39 Heritage rivers across Canada,
and more are being added to the system each year. They range from
the Arctic barrens to southern Ontario’s rich farmlands; from
Newfoundland’s rocky hills to the mountains and glaciers of
the Yukon. The goal is to establish a system that reflects the diversity
of Canada’s river environments and celebrates the role of
rivers in Canada’s history and society. The dream is to ensure
that these rivers flow into the future with their heritage features
protected for generations to come.
Nominating and Designating Canadian Heritage Rivers
Establishing Canadian Heritage Rivers is a two-step process, nomination
and designation. Although river nominations may be submitted to
the Canadian Heritage Rivers Board only by participating governments,
private citizens and groups are encouraged to present submissions
to their federal, provincial or territorial board member for any
river they feel is worthy. To be considered, the river must have
outstanding natural, cultural and/or recreational values, a high
level of public support, and it must be demonstrated that sufficient
measures will be put in place to ensure that those values will be
maintained. Based on these criteria, the responsible government(s)
decide(s) whether or not to pursue the nomination of a specific
river. Once nominated, the Board reviews the nomination and, if
it meets selection guidelines for the System, recommends it to the
responsible Ministers.
A nominated river becomes designated once a management plan, or
heritage strategy, that ensures the river will be managed to conserve
its outstanding natural, cultural and/or recreational values, is
lodged with the Board by the government(s) that made the nomination.
Production of a management plan or heritage strategy is based on
public consultation and consensus. All protective actions on Canadian
Heritage Rivers depend on existing laws and regulations, and respect
the rights of Aboriginal peoples, communities, private landowners,
and other stakeholders.
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