Ottawa and First Nations in P.E.I. sign agreement to establish national park reserve
LENNOX ISLAND, P.E.I. — A pristine chain of islands with white-sand beaches, described as Prince Edward Island’s last coastal wilderness, could soon become Canada’s next national park.
Parks Canada signed a provisional agreement Wednesday with two First Nations, saying the memorandum of understanding is aimed at protecting Hog Island Sandhills, which includes one of the most significant coastal dune ecosystems on the East Coast.
Known in the Mi’kmaq language as Pituamkek, which means, “at the long sand dune,” the 50-kilometre strip of land off P.E.I.’s northwest coast has been used by the Mi’kmaq for 4,000 years. It includes a number of significant archeological digs, and sites considered sacred to the Mi’kmaq.
“Many of us went there with our parents and our grandparents to fish eels and oysters and to pick berries and run along the endless, sandy beaches,” Chief Darlene Bernard of the Lennox Island First Nation told a virtual news conference.


