News & Information

News & Updates from the park

06

Apr 2013

Kilcona Disabled Dog Owner Urges City to Level the Playing Field

Posted by / in Information /

Kilcona’s Disabled Dog Owner Urges City to Level the Playing Field –

and the Trails!

This winter the City of Winnipeg designated three Kilcona parking stalls for for people with disabilities. Finding a parking spot close to the dog play area is now relatively easy – the real challenge for people with special mobility needs is getting into and using the off-leash area.

Photo credit: Colleen Blouin

For many disabled people, accessing Kilcona’s off-leash trails is simply not possible.

Physically unable to access park shelters or off-leash trails, and denied off-leash access to paved trails, Kilcona’s disabled dog owners gather around a picnic table a few feet from the edge of the parking lot. And at 30 below, it’s no picnic!

 

This week East Kildonan resident Kathleen Kirkman sent an open letter to Mayor Sam Katz, North Kildonan City Councillor Jeff Browaty and East Kildonan Councillor Thomas Steen urging the City to remove systemic barriers and provide reasonable accommodation for disabled dog owners like her who use Kilcona Park.

 

 

Here is Kathleen’s  letter:

 

To Mayor Katz and Councillors Browaty and Steen:

My name is Kathleen Kirkman and I have been an off-leash dog park user for the past five years. I have Multiple Sclerosis. I have always believed that active living is a key to mental health. This is more so for those who of us who have a disability.

Photo credit: Colleen Blouin

Getting out of the house and communing with nature, dogs, and other dog lovers is a welcome reprieve from the monotony of many disabled people’s lives.

 

Discovering Kilcona off-leash dog park was such a relief for me as I have two large dogs that require vigorous exercise. Being disabled, I find Kilcona’s off-leash park an ideal place to socialize with fellow dog owners, thereby lessening the isolation I might have felt had the park not existed.

 The beauty of this park makes the whole experience so therapeutic. I’m in awe at how nature has transformed a former garbage dump into a virtual oasis. I recently relocated to East Kildonan to be closer to Kilcona.

 

Photo credit: Colleen Blouin

My dogs have been with me prior to the commencement of my illness and make my circumstances more palatable than it would be without them.  In the course of my visits to Kilcona Park, I have met many dog owners who, like me, have a variety of physical impairments

 

The Problem

I try to be as independent as possible but Kilcona’s badly-eroded off-leash trails pose a formidable barrier for me and my disabled friends. It’s simply not possible for us to navigate the trails in the off-leash area.

 

In the spring, the paths are so muddy that my scooter inevitably gets caked in mud, and becomes immobilized.

 

 

When I attempt to avoid the muddy sections, I inevitably get trapped in the mud.

 

 

or worse still, fall off my scooter.

 

 

By the end of my outing, my dogs are covered in mud –

 

 

the scooter looks like a mud replica of a scooter, and my shoes or boots are caked in heavy prairie  gumbo.

 

 In the summer the trails are uneven and badly rutted, with long stretches of standing water, making passage a veritable challenge.

 

 Several times my scooter has fallen over and like a Kafkian cockroach, I try to right myself, and then the scooter. Fortunately, Kilcona’s community of dog walkers watches out for me and provides assistance when I need it.

 

 

 

I urge the City of Winnipeg to fulfill its obligation to make reasonable accommodations to allow disabled dog owners the opportunity to experience the park, to socialize and have a fulfilling off-leash recreational experience with our dogs on an equal basis with others.

Repair and upgrade the trails in Kilcona’s off-leash area and allow those of us with mobility challenges to walk our dogs off-leash on the snow-cleared, paved trails in the on-leash area in winter.

 

 As the population ages, there will be more individuals with mobility needs who require exercise for their dog companions as well as themselves.  The other side of the coin is that senior citizens will benefit from safe trails to maintain their health and the health of their canine family members.

 

 

 

Respectfully,

Kathleen Kirkman

Please select the social network you want to share this page with:

05

Apr 2013

An Uncertain Future for Kilcona Dog Park

Posted by / in Information /

An Uncertain Future for Kilcona Dog Park

By Alisa Pihulak

 Reprinted from Canstar Community News The Times

(Photo credit ALISA PIHULAK)

 

Users of the Kilcona off-leash dog park are concerned by city plans to decrease the size of the park.

There are not many dog parks in Winnipeg, so Riverbend residents are thankful to be able to travel only 10 minutes by car to the Kilcona off-leash dog park.

Last last month, the thousands of weekly visitors to the park were shocked to hear that the city plans to shrink the off-leash section of the park to half its size.

This beautiful space, with its natural playground of creek, hills, and open area is the site for furry friends to play Frisbee or catch, swim in the creek, and socialize with hundreds of beautiful breeds of dogs in a safe and controlled environment. It is a space that provides the necessary exercise needed for a dog’s physical and mental health. The joy of watching your pet enjoy the uninhibited freedom available only at an off-leash dog park is priceless.

Cutting the size of Kilcona Dog Park will result in many problems for the visitors and their beloved dogs.

Donna Henry, president of the Kilcona Park Dog Club says that there are only so many people and dogs that can fit into a limited space without causing damage to the environment and ruining the experience for its visitors.

“Cutting up the dog park will cause overcrowding to a very well-used existing space. The current visiting experience isn’t always what it should be because of overcrowding since the closure of the Transcona dog park,” she said.

For Riverbend residents, Little Mountain Dog Park is the next closest off-leash dog park, about a 15-minute drive from the area. However, this park is also fighting to stay open since the City of Winnipeg proposed it as a site for routing of the new rapid transit system.

There is hope of saving Kilcona Dog Park from this proposition. Henry is encouraging people to become members of the Kilcona Dog Park Club. For only $5 you can register and enjoy many benefits of membership, including 10% off most purchases at the Reenders Square and Rivergrove PetValu locations, 10% off exam fees at McPhillips Animal Hospital and many more savings at other businesses in the area. Membership fees will go towards improving the Kilcona Dog Park, which just recently purchased cigarette butt dispensers at the park.

Henry believes the community can win the battle to save the park by standing together. She encourages people to write to Mayor Sam Katz and also to their area councillor. To become a member of the Kilcona Park Dog Club visit http://kilconaparkdogclub.ca.

Alisa Pihulak is a community correspondent for Riverbend.

Here is a link to the original article.

http://www.winnipegfreepress.com/our-communities/times/correspondent/An-uncertain-future-for-Kilcona-Dog-Park-201076971.html

 

 

 

Please select the social network you want to share this page with:

05

Apr 2013

KPDC Mounts Dogged Defense of Kilcona’s Off-Leash Area

Posted by / in Information /

KPDC Mounts Dogged Defense of Kilcona’s Off-Leash Are

Kilcona Park Dog Club will present its own land use plan to the City on Monday, one unanimously approved by its membership earlier this week. The Kilcona plan is based on the recommendations of two reports previously commissioned by the City of Winnipeg

KPDC, which represents over 3000 dog owners on the Kilcona Park/Harbourview Recreation Complex Stakeholder Group,  is urging the City to support its plan to maintain the integrity of Winnipeg’s largest off-leash area. Kilcona’s dog community is overwhelmingly the park’s largest and most active year-round user group.

The KPDC plan calls for:

  • physical separation of the on-leash and off-leash areas to safeguard people and dogs and minimize user conflicts,
  • a modest expansion in the size of the off-leash area to minimize the impact on the environment, improve the visitor experience and accommodate increased usage in the future.
  • seasonal off-leash use of some on-leash areas of the park
  • reasonable accommodation for disabled dog owners and seniors to experience the park in winter, to socialize with friends and have a fulfilling off-leash recreational experience with their dogs on an equal basis with others.

 

Please select the social network you want to share this page with:

28

Mar 2013

Protecting Winnipeg’s Off-leash Dog Parks

Posted by / in Information /

Protecting Winnipeg’s Off-leash Dog Parks

Angelika Zapszalka’s article in last week’s award-winning French language newspaper, La Liberté, draws attention to the rapid reduction in Winnipeg’s off-leash space. Here is a link to Angelika’s original article.

http://laliberte.newspaperdirect.com/epaper/showlink.aspx?bookmarkid=59U6X0X14TZ5&linkid=d43f2d9b-68ac-42ee-a7e5-91eb44ce9fc8&pdaffid=%2BkGqAPpXYpRXYdI%2Fak0Obw%3D%3D

Thanks to La Liberté for permission to print the English translation that appears below.

Transcona’s only off-leash area closed in June 2012. Winnipeg’s Public Works Department paved and repurposed it. It is now part of the six kilometer Transcona Trail, a link in Winnipeg’s Active Transportation Network.

Transcona has no off-leash dog parks. This sign redirects dog owners to Kilcona Park and a small unfenced, off-leash area surrounding the Mazenod retention pond in St. Boniface Industrial Park.

Translated from Angelika Zapszalka’s article in the March 27, 2013 edition of La Liberté.

Dog parks in Winnipeg are losing ground. To advocate for their existence, an association of representatives of dog park groups and citizens concerned with the problem is being formed.

Many Winnipeg dog owners are unhappy. So are representatives of several dog park associations in the city. Not only are there few off-leash dog parks in Winnipeg, but some of them are endangered.

To address the situation, various groups and individuals concerned with the issue have decided to come together in an association they called Winnipeg Network of Dog Owner Groups (WINDOG).

“Our desire is to partner together to speak with one voice, says the President of the new association and Co-chair of the Maple Grove Park Dog Owner’s Association (MGPDOA), Frank Machovec. We want to defend the common interests of all members through a unique and enlightened voice.”

Towards Greater Transparency

Currently, about a dozen people attend WINDOG meetings. Among them are representatives of dog park [associations]- Kilcona Dog Park Club, Little Mountain Park Dog Club,  Maple Grove Park Dog Owners Association, [King’s Park Dog Association] and individual members like Franco-Manitoban Mathieu Allard, an owner of three dogs who advocates for  a dog park in St. Boniface.

“We are not yet an incorporated association, says Mathieu Allard. We are currently waiting for a coalition and the annexation of other groups and individuals to continue the process. We are also very open about the organization of the future super-association.“

In general, the main problems WINDOG points to are the City’s failure to consult with the public regarding guidelines that are being developed for Winnipeg’s off-leash areas, the lack of transparency regarding the closure of Winnipeg dog parks, and the failure to create new neighbourhood dog parks when existing ones are closed. The coalition also has questions about the health and safety of people and [dogs] using some of the existing parks.

Drastic Reductions

Most recently, the fate of Kilcona Dog Park has been particularly concerning. “The City has proposed reducing the area of the dog park by 50%,” informs Mathieu Allard.

The Coalition strongly opposes this scenario, which it considers is happening too frequently. “In Winnipeg, we went from 12 dog parks to 10 in the past five years,” says the Franco-Manitoban. This figure seems very small when we know that a city like Calgary has 150 parks dogs.”

WINDOG backs up its comparison with the City of Calgary, pointing out it is comparable to Winnipeg in the size of its canine population, estimated at 100,000 animals. “In Winnipeg, the total area of dog parks is approximately 100 hectares, while it is more than 1250 in Calgary, said Mathieu Allard. It is time for our city to take further measures in this regard.”

“WINDOG aims to do so while, at the same time, allowing the emergence of appropriate regulations for the existing parks dogs,” he says.

 

Please select the social network you want to share this page with:

26

Mar 2013

SPECIAL GENERAL MEMBERSHIP MEETING

Posted by / in Events, Information /

NOTICE OF SPECIAL GENERAL MEMBERSHIP MEETING

 

 MONDAY, APRIL 1ST

6:30PM

KILCONA ALLIANCE CHURCH

 

KPDC’s Board will share maps and information about the City’s proposal to reduce the size of the off-leash area.

In accordance with KPDC’s bylaws you must be a Member in Good Standing to attend the meeting.

Memberships may be purchased or renewed at Pet Valu – Reenders or Rivergrove locations.

Please select the social network you want to share this page with:

KPDC Privacy Officer

Any questions related to privacy can be addressed to KPDC's Privacy Officer at vicepresident@kpdc.ca

Contact Information

Kilcona Park Dog Club Inc.
PO Box 43052
RPO Kildonan Place
Winnipeg, Manitoba R2C 5G5

Previous posts

Official Social Media Page

Copyright © 2015 Kilcona Park Dog Club Inc. all rights reserved
Powered by WPCloud.ca