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Walk the Lake returns for second year in Āé¶¹AV

PLANĀé¶¹AV hosted the event, calling for clear walkways along the beach
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Carrying colourful signs decrying impediments constructed on the foreshore, a group of Āé¶¹AV residents walked from City Park to Rotary Beach to raise awareness and create change.

ā€œFor many years people have been trying to block access to the foreshore, and people began thinking you couldn’t walk the beach (where there are docks),ā€ Brenda Bachmann, a member of PLANĀé¶¹AV, said. ā€œSo we are bringing awareness to people that you can walk the beach,ā€

Bachmann told the crowd that as long as they have one foot in the water it’s a public space. Waterfront property extends from the normal high water mark to the lake, and all the space in between is for the province and the public.

Long term residents Dave Harris and Deb Matheson joined dozens of residents as they marched down the foreshore.

ā€œThis is public property and there shouldn’t be obstructions,ā€Harris said. ā€œThe shoreline is public property and they are blocking it— either they (the home owners) have too much money or they don’t care.ā€

The group had to leave the beach side to walk on the street three times to finish their walk due to total obstructions of the foreshore.

ā€œWe are really disappointed in what’s happened. By the time our grandkids grow up— it’s become a rich man’s paradise,ā€ Matheson said. ā€œYou can’t walk more than a few properties because of the docks and rocks people have put out into the property.ā€

Related: Walk to press for public access to Āé¶¹AV’s foreshore back for second year

PLANĀé¶¹AV says its priorities are:

• Construction of a planned small public park linking Strathcona Beach Park and Royal Avenue Beach Access.

• Repair and improvement of the existing public walkway along the lakeshore north of Maude Roxby Wetland.

• Construction, in a basic form, of the long-awaited lakeshore park near Cedar Avenue, with features added at later dates as budgets allow. The city has owned a row of 12 waterfront properties on the site of the future park for more than 20 years.

• Having the City of Āé¶¹AV resume buying properties that are adjacent to existing lakefront parks when they become available. It says costs could be reduced by selling the road-side part of these properties and adding just the lakefront portion of the property to parks.

• Having the city provide, and permanently install, small signs at the high water mark of waterfront properties so beach walkers don’t inadvertently trespass onto private property.

• Completion of the missing sections of the Abbott Street recreation corridor multi-use path, south of the Āé¶¹AV General Hospital.

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