Wow. The city is going to a lot of effort and expense to maintain the accessibility of the location (and create accessible fishing opportunities at other locations), while trying to mitigate the flow of garbage. It seems to be a very balanced solution.
Kudos to the city of Chilliwack and to the stakeholders (Chris et al) who made their voices heard.
I agree Clarki, the City has taken the time to listen to inputs from the Fraser Valley Salmon Society and they are trying their best to accommodate the concerns anglers have. In the past year, Tourism Chilliwack (like most other regions in BC) has shifted its focus from farm tours to outdoor activities like hiking, mountain biking and fishing, therefore it makes sense to create better (not necessarily easier as we can see in this case, but more organized) accesses for anglers. Proper parking spaces, washrooms should definitely be welcome by the angling community. By tidying up the access spots, perhaps that will reduce irresponsible usage. It'll be important to keep this dialogue going with the City as development progresses.
One unfortunate outcome of this will be the loss of access to those easier spots by the train bridge for the older anglers. Sure the trails will be smoother to walk on and some walking is definitely healthy for the body, but many older anglers I know can barely walk 100ft so walking from the parking lot to those spots will be out of the question.
There are also a few other concerns. Burbot has already pointed out one of them. One of the perks with parking your car along that trail is being able to keep an eye on your vehicle while you fish. Hopefully with a properly assigned parking lot will also bring proper monitoring by some type of patrol, so we don't end up with regular break-ins like we have seen at Lickman and Peach in the past.
The other thing which will most likely happen is that, knowing how fishermen think, they'll end up parking on the Yarrow residential side and walk across the railway bridge instead of utilizing the new parking lot on the Chilliwack side.
My third concern is how will the city make sure the designated parking slots for disabled users (users, not just anglers, because walkers, bikers etc will also be utilizing this parking space) are not abused. Will there be sufficient parking spaces to accommodate anglers in September and October as well as other non-fishing users who arrive later in the morning?
Anyway, it is always good to see progress. Personally I am excited to see some of my regular spots becoming foot-access spots instead of vehicle access spots for obvious reasons.