Third time may be the charm for Manitoba bid to get UNESCO title for forest
WINNIPEG — Two provincial governments and several First Nations communities are hoping the third time’s the charm in a multimillion-dollar effort to secure international recognition for a big stretch of boreal forest along the Manitoba-Ontario boundary.
Following two failed attempts, a revised bid package covering a smaller area has been put together and shipped to the UNESCO World Heritage Committee for the area known as Pimachiowin Aki — an Ojibwa phrase that means ‘land that gives life.’
“We are confident that the site, with a small reduction in area, will still be seen very positively by the world heritage committee,” Gord Jones, project manager with the arm’s-length Pimachiowin Aki Corp., said in an interview.
The Manitoba government has spent or committed more than $15 million over the last 13 years to support the bid, while Ontario has put up about $1 million. The governments hope that international recognition as a World Heritage Site would boost tourism to the remote area and help ensure it remained protected from over-development.


