Uncertainty is giving way to grief for people forced from their homes in Jasper, as more details emerge about the destruction caused by the largest wildfire the national park has seen in more than a century.
Everyone who evacuated from the historic community should soon have answers about the fate of their homes and businesses. On Saturday afternoon, the municipality will be releasing a detailed list and map of all properties lost in the fire.
The Municipality of Jasper and officials with Parks Canada — the lead agency on the firefighting effort — will detail the damage and provide an update on the wildfire response during a news conference in Hinton at 3:30 p.m. MT. CBC News will broadcast it live.
A massive wall of flames moved in Wednesday, levelling entire neighbourhoods. Parks Canada officials estimated Friday that 358 of the town’s 1,113 structures — about one-third of all buildings — were destroyed.
In an update posted on social media Saturday, officials said the fire continues to burn out of control and has now consumed an estimated 32,000 hectares.
We want to avoid telling people they lost their home when they didn’t, or saying they didn’t lose their home when they did.-Parks Canada
The size was downgraded from an estimated 36,000 hectares following an aerial survey of the perimeter, but it remains the largest wildfire to burn in Jasper National Park in more than 100 years, the post said.
Parks officials have urged patience as their crews, with help from newly-arrived troops, continue to battle the flames while also verifying the scope of the damage, house-by-house.
“It takes time to get this information correct, we understand your frustrations and we will publicly share more information when we are in a better position to do so,” Parks Canada said in a statement late Friday.
“We want to avoid telling people they lost their home when they didn’t, or saying they didn’t lose their home when they did.
Recent fire activity has been low thanks to cooler, wet weather, but a return to slightly warmer temperatures is expected to escalate the danger, parks officials said Saturday.
Crews are working along the perimeter closest to town, dousing hot spots and are planning for the creation of containment lines that would act as a barrier if the flames return.
As of Friday evening, when government officials toured the areas hardest hit by the fire, some parts of the wreckage were still smouldering.
Parks officials expect that all remaining fires within the townsite will be extinguished Saturday.
Bucketing, meanwhile, will be taking place near Marmot Basin, where the damage to infrastructure remains unknown.
Power is being restored to parts of the downtown core and critical infrastructure, a key step in speeding damage assessment and recovery, parks officials said.
Arrangements are also being made to allow evacuees, who were forced to flee west to Valemount, B.C., to safely travel through the park to reunite with family in Alberta, on the park’s east side.
It’s unclear when residents will be allowed to return home and begin the daunting process of rebuilding destroyed properties and repairing those still standing. The fire is among 164 wildfires burning across the province, as of noon MT Saturday, according to Alberta Wildfire.
Officials from Alberta Wildfire and the Alberta Emergency Management Agency will provide an update on the ongoing wildfire situation at 2 p.m. MT Saturday. Watch it live with CBC News.
The provincial government will host a telephone town hall for wildfire evacuees on Monday from 6:30 p.m. to 8 p.m. Details on how to join are available here.
The fire, described as a monster with flames reaching 100 metres high, hit Jasper late Wednesday, scorching portions of the town about 365 kilometres west of Edmonton.
Two wildfires — one north, the other south — had threatened Jasper for days, forcing thousands to evacuate Monday evening as the flames flared dangerously amid powerful winds.
As the southern fire spread across the townsite and beyond, it merged with the northern fire.
What is now called the Jasper Wildfire Complex, which also includes the Utopia wildfire near Miette Hot Springs, had burned an estimated 36,000 hectares as of Thursday night.
The fire continues to burn out of control, but conditions are expected to temporarily calm amid cooler, wet weather in the mountain park this weekend.
Fire crews have been taking advantage of the conditions to make progress on dousing hot spots in smouldering buildings, and along the wildfire perimeter nearest the Jasper townsite.
Troops arrive
Outside the gates of fire-ravaged Jasper National Park, military cargo trucks rumble along the highway, carrying soldiers clad in green camouflage.
Members of the Canadian Armed Forces have arrived to help with the firefighting effort. Soldiers from southwestern Manitoba’s CFB Shilo were the first to arrive Friday night, setting up camp in Hinton, Alta., inside the local recreation centre and arena.
Hinton, a town outside the national park’s eastern gates, became the wildfire centre of operations after most first responders had to evacuate Jasper Wednesday night.
When the Forces respond to a crisis like a wildfire, it is known as Operation Lentus. Troops will be providing logistical support and assisting with firefighting, including dousing hotspots and mopping up areas devastated by the flames.
Troops will spend Saturday morning on forced rest before preparing for deployments on the front lines to fight alongside Alberta firefighters already in the field, said Maj. Colin Carswell, of combat service support company command, based in Shilo.
“We have a great team,” Carswell said, adding that the soldiers, trained for the tasks at hand, are eager to help.
“Once you see the people that are affected, some people or some families that have come in from Jasper that stop and talk to you, you really think about how, if this happened to you, you would want somebody like our team helping them out.”
The troops deploy with three days worth of ready-to-eat meals — what the military calls individual meal packs (IMPs), or rations, he said.
“We are working to, eventually, bring out kitchen trailers to serve fresh meals to the soldiers, so they can have a nice hot meal and a shower in the arena after a long day on the lines with the Alberta wildfires,” Carswell said.