BeaverTails back? NCC mulling return of concessions to Rideau Canal Skateway - Action News
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Ottawa

BeaverTails back? NCC mulling return of concessions to Rideau Canal Skateway

An official announcement aboutthe offerings during the skateway's 52nd annual season isstill to come, but the National Capital Commission says it is consulting with public health authorities about allowing snack retailers back on the Rideau Canal.

Offerings still to be determined given unpredictability of COVID-19 pandemic: NCC

The Rideau Canal Skateway's concession stands were closed for the 2021 skating season, but the NCC says it's in talks with public health officials about allowing them to reopen this winter. (Jean Delisle/CBC)

The National Capital Commission says it's mulling the possibility of allowing concessions and rentals to return to the Rideau Canal Skateway for the upcoming 2022 season.

But plans may changegiven the unpredictability of the COVID-19 pandemic,the NCC saidin an emailto CBC News on Friday.

An official announcement aboutthe offerings during the skateway's 52nd annual season isstill to come, as the commission consults with public health authorities. But should food vendors be allowed, people will have to wear masks while they line up at concessions and use public washrooms,said Carl Langlois, the NCC's skateway coordinator.

Masks will otherwise be recommended while people skate.

"We'll have probably half of our picnic tables available and our rest areas," Langlois said. "But our shelters will be closed so far."

Nooutdoor fire pits will be on site either.

Predicting an opening date for the canal itself is difficult, he added.

"We still have a lot of work to do to achieve our required 30-centimetre [depth] to welcome skaters," he said.

'We really missed being out there'

Businesses like skateway staple BeaverTailswere not allowed to operate on the canal last year, as officials sought to avoid crowding.

"We really missed being out there last year," said BeaverTails co-founder Grant Hooker. "We were all ready to go. We did our staffing we hire anywhere from 300 to 400 young people every winterandthen finallyit was decided it might be a spreader event to have lineups."

If food vendors get the green light,BeaverTails will have staff and signs on-handto remind people about distancing, Hooker said.

The well-established business, founded four decades ago in Killaloe, Ont., was able to shoulder the loss of last year'sskateway revenue, he added.

"If it had been year number one, back in the winter of 1981, we may have moved back to Killaloeand I would have gone back into log-building," Hooker said. "But now it's been 40 years and we put away a nest egg."

Two people skate under a bridge with a castle-like building in the background.
There's still much work needed to reach the skateway's required 30-centimetre depth, its operations manager said Friday. (Brian Morris/CBC)

'Hoping and praying' for relaxed restrictions

Scott Shackell, the general manager of Dows Lake Pavilion which includes two restaurants plus a skate and sleigh rental shop said the return of rentals would be welcome.

Their rentals were limited last year to offering snowshoes out of a parking booth.

"It might be a little slower than previous years," Shackell said."It's really a tourist-driven season. Lots of people [would normally] come in from the states, northern Europe. That's a big chunk of the rentals business. But there's still a huge, huge portion of Ottawansthat I'm sure will come out, given a lot of indoor recreation activities aren't available right now."

Shackell is also "hoping and praying" the province's current ban on indoor dining will be lifted by Jan. 26. Otherwise, the pavilion's restaurants would likelytake a hit, he said.

"They are still open for takeoutright now. But that's a tough sell," he said.

"It's a lot easier to take your skatesoff and head into a warm venue for a bite to eat and a glass of winethan it is tosit and freeze yourbuns off outside on a bench, eating takeout."

With files from Robyn Miller