Title: Walking on the water
Description: Walking on the water fo
oor old Buffalo Lake.
It never had any pretensions
of grandeur like Lesser
Slave Lake or Lake Athabasca.
It was never a brash, upstart lake
like Sylvan, nor did it beg to have its
picture taken like that vain Louise.
No, Buffalo Lake was perfectly content
to be little more than an overgrown
prairie slough. Albertans who
stumbled upon Rochon Sands Provincial
Park accepted the lake for what it
was: a lovely hideaway for bird- watching
and wading. Nobody expected
Waikiki, so no one was disappointed.
Buffalo Lake prospered in relative
obscurity, sparkling under the summer
sun without a care in the world,
until Premier Don Getty won the
Stettler byelection. That's when its
troubles began.
All of a sudden somebody in Edmonton
resurrected a plan to raise
the water level, and stabilize the lake
for boaters and swimmers. The idea
had been tossed out years earlier because
of the environmental
consequences, but with the election, it
bobbed to the surface like a pop can
in Pigeon.
Then the premier built his new
homestead on land overlooking Buffalo
Lake, later buying 640 acres adjacent
to his property for a reported
$ 209,000. His aide said he planned to
" throw a few cattle on it" or use it for
hunting, but Stettler rumor had it he
was planning something bigger —
much bigger.
Alone at night, Buffalo Lake started
to ripple with apprehension.
The government began to plan a
new environmental study just in case
— by some slight error in judgment —
the scientific experts had been wrong
the first time ( accidents happen, don't
they?). Albertans were told that the
timing of the new study after the byelection
was just another coincidence.
When West Yellowhead MLA Gerry
Doyle questioned the propriety of
Getty's lobbying efforts for the $ 15
million Buffalo Lake project so near
his own property, the premier replied
he was only defending the interests of
a community with the potential to be
one of Alberta's top tourism areas.
Think of it. Majestic Banff, breathtaking
Jasper, magnificent Kana-naskis
— and Buffalo Lake.
" One of the keys to it is having a
healthy Buffalo Lake as a recreation-tourism
attraction, and we're going to
do all the necessary things from an
environmental point of view, and then
we're going to make it happen," the
premier said in early December,
taunting his NDP critic: " Isn't it too
bad?"
Well, Buffalo Lake thought so. The
signs were everywhere that the premier
just wouldn't leave it in peace.
Since Getty had come to the
constituency, Stettler had been
awarded the 1991 Alberta Summer
Games, a $ 500,000 alcohol and drug
abuse treatment centre, and $ 750,000
in grants for a new tennis court and
other recreation facilities. •
Getty has asked environment officials
to try to build an experimental
waste incinerator for the county. A
Calgary firm wants to construct a $ 48
million greenhouse in the area. With
all this busy activity, would anyone
leave a little lake alone?
These days Buffalo Lake sees the
writing on the wall. Pitch- and- putt
golf courses. Water slides and pony
rides. Hot dog stands in the Rochon
Sands. Goodbye to the ducks, hello to
the weekend yahoos.
If bodies of water could weep, this
one would weep buckets.
Creator: [not supplied]
Subject: Newspaper Article
Location: [not supplied]
Relevant Dates: 1990-12-31
Rights: For Research and Private Study Use Only