‘This is a success’: Jasper mayor defends Parks Canada over wildfire management

Parks Canada CEO Ron Hallman said heavy winds and dry temperatures caused the inferno to grow quickly

OTTAWA — Jasper’s mayor said Monday he rejects any suggestion that Parks Canada failed in its management of Jasper National Park against the risk of wildfire, saying their efforts resulted in 70 per cent of the town remaining intact.

Richard Ireland said he’s heard criticism against the federal department coming from residents of Jasper, who he acknowledged are reeling from seeing a third of the town’s structures being destroyed by an out-of-control wildfire last week.

“For anyone who might see this as a failure, I reject that premise,” he told reporters during a briefing Monday. “This is a success.”

He said people are asking why more of the forest was not cleared, particularly of pine-beetle dead trees, which critics suggest may have fed the wildfire. While officials say they played a factor, Ireland said it is simply not feasible to have cleared the area.

“We’re talking about a stretch of land, a valley that’s kilometres wide and 30 kilometres long and it is absolutely full of pine-beetle dead trees,” said Ireland. “There is no conceivable way to remove all of them, so we have to prepare for the eventuality of fire.”

Parks Canada President and CEO Ron Hallman said heavy winds and dry temperatures caused the inferno to grow quickly, adding that firefighters had to battle a fast-moving wall of flames that towered high above the trees.

Hallman also defended the work Parks Canada had done to date to manage the park, saying he understands people have questions and that there will be a time and place to seek answers.

No injuries or fatalities were reported from the blaze, with officials saying 70 per cent of the town’s structures were saved.

Ireland underscored how all visitors and residents of the town were able to be brought to safety.

“I reject entirely any suggestion that there is a failure here,” he said.

Environment Minister Steven Guilbeault says all fires in the community of Jasper, Alta., have been extinguished and that officials planning for a “staged re-entry” have no timelines yet.

Planning for re-entry must be done carefully given officials warn that upcoming weather conditions create a heightened fire risk, the minister added.

More to come.

National Post

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