Close X
Saturday, September 21, 2024
ADVT 
National

Parks Canada, Guilbeault defend wildfire preparation policies after Jasper blaze

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 29 Jul, 2024 04:07 PM
  • Parks Canada, Guilbeault defend wildfire preparation policies after Jasper blaze

Parks Canada officials and politicians angrily denied Monday that forest management policies in Jasper National Park contributed to a catastrophic wildfire that damaged one-third of the townsite.

Ron Hallman, CEO of the federal agency, said it was "ridiculous" to assert his organization puts a higher value on nature than people.

"That is offensive, frankly," he said. "There is nothing that is more important to Parks Canada than the safety of our employees, our guests and the people that we work with." 

Although fire officials said Monday that fires within the Jasper townsite have been extinguished and progress against the fire is being made, flames in the Rocky Mountain park 360 kilometres west of Edmonton continue to burn. 

More than 20,000 people in and around the community were ordered to evacuate last Monday because of the speed of the fires and more that 30 per cent of town's buildings have been destroyed. 

Federal Environment Minister Steven Guilbeault said a staged re-entry plan for those residents is being developed, although he did not give a timeline. The highway through the park remains closed. 

Critics have suggested more could have been done to reduce the fire hazard in the area. Some say prescribed burns should have been used to thin out forests thick with highly flammable dead trees, especially those killed by mountain pine beetle infestation.

Hallman said Parks Canada has been using prescribed burns in Jasper since 1996. He said in the last decade, Jasper has had 15 prescribed burns that have covered thousands of hectares. 

"We do everything we can reasonably do to remove underbrush, to do prescribed burns, to reduce risks to assets, to towns, to people."

Jasper Mayor Richard Ireland defended Parks Canada, saying the impact of mountain pine beetle was so widespread in the park that removing all the dead trees would have been impossible.

"We're talking about a valley that is kilometres wide and 30 kilometres long and it is absolutely full of pine-beetle-dead trees. There is no way to remove all of them."

He called the response to the Jasper wildfire a success. He said the town and Parks Canada were aware of the risk and took steps to prepare the town against them, such as becoming one of Canada's first FireSmart communities.

"We anticipated that something like this could happen so we fortified our community," he said. 

"When the attack came, those defences worked. We suffered casualties but we did hold our ground."

Steve Carr, executive director with the Alberta Emergency Management Agency, said exercises were done six weeks ago in anticipation of such an event.

"I would suggest that they were very well prepared and very well integrated and worked very well to face this emergency, the scope of which it is hard to imagine in advance and very hard to prepare for such a dramatic situation," he said.

"They were a well-prepared community by all accounts."

Guilbeault also stood up for Parks Canada, pointing out 70 per cent of the historic town was saved.

"Years of preparation, forest management, simulated evacuations and firefighting efforts paid off," he said. 

Parks Canada has said information on what has been damaged outside the town is being collected. Firefighters are working to protect homes and other accommodations in those outlying areas.

Jasper National Park remains closed and RCMP are ensuring the town is secure, Parks Canada said, noting there are checkpoints to keep people out.

A Parks Canada official said Saturday the fire could burn for months. 

Evacuees from Jasper learned Sunday the Alberta and federal governments will provide additional money for relief, with both saying they'll match donations to the Canadian Red Cross 2024 Alberta Wildfires Appeal.

Federal Emergency Preparedness Minister Harjit Sajjan and Mike Ellis, Alberta's minister of public safety and emergency services, said in a joint news release that the donation-matching initiative means every $1 donated will become $3 to support people most affected by wildfires in Jasper and across the province. 

Extra help to fight the fires in Jasper and other parts of Alberta has also been arriving. The Canadian military tweeted photos Sunday of soldiers in Hinton, where it said they were undergoing "firefighter refresher training" led by the local fire department.

Forty Quebec forest firefighters flew to Edmonton on Sunday ahead of a two-week mission in the field. Support from Ontario, Mexico, Alaska, Australia and South Africa -- which sent 200 firefighters -- has also arrived.

Elsewhere in Alberta, the province said Sunday that rain helped firefighters extinguish nearly 50 wildfires in the previous 48 hours, and another 17 wildfires were no longer out of control. 

 

MORE National ARTICLES

B.C. man shoots grizzly bear in attack that left him with broken bones, cuts

B.C. man shoots grizzly bear in attack that left him with broken bones, cuts
A hunter in southeastern British Columbia managed to shoot a grizzly bear that attacked him on Thursday and left him with broken bones and cuts. RCMP in Elk Valley, near Fernie, say the 36-year-old man from nearby Sparwood was out with his father when he was attacked by an adult grizzly.

B.C. man shoots grizzly bear in attack that left him with broken bones, cuts

No jail time for ex security guard

No jail time for ex security guard
A former security guard at a university in Langley, B-C, who was convicted of manslaughter will not be going to prison. The B-C Supreme Court found the 55-year-old man guilty in the 2020 incident at Trinity Western University that resulted in the death of a 30-year-old.

No jail time for ex security guard

B.C. boaters ordered to remove drainage plugs to prevent spread of whirling disease

B.C. boaters ordered to remove drainage plugs to prevent spread of whirling disease
British Columbia's chief veterinarian has issued an order making it illegal to transport boats or other watercraft without removing the drain plug to prevent the spread of whirling disease. The Ministry of Water, Land and Resource Stewardship says the order takes effect on Friday and is also intended to keep invasive mussels out of B.C. waterways.

B.C. boaters ordered to remove drainage plugs to prevent spread of whirling disease

Mother, stepfather get 15 years for manslaughter in death of B.C. boy Dontay Lucas, 6

Mother, stepfather get 15 years for manslaughter in death of B.C. boy Dontay Lucas, 6
The mother and stepfather of six-year-old Dontay Lucas have been sentenced to 15 years each in prison by a B.C. Supreme Court judge. Mitchell Frank and Rykel Frank stood in shackles in a court in Port Alberni as they were sentenced for the death of the boy who was found in medical distress inside the home he shared with his mother in March 2018.   

Mother, stepfather get 15 years for manslaughter in death of B.C. boy Dontay Lucas, 6

Rain brings 'excellent' conditions for crews battling northern B.C. wildfires

Rain brings 'excellent' conditions for crews battling northern B.C. wildfires
A rainy day in and around Fort Nelson, B.C., was what fire crews were hoping for as they continue to battle a wildfire burning 2.5 kilometres outside the town. Evan Peck with the BC Wildfire Service said a low-pressure system brought much-needed rain over the last two days, along with cooler temperatures and lower humidity, making for "excellent" conditions for fire suppression efforts.

Rain brings 'excellent' conditions for crews battling northern B.C. wildfires

Kasari Govender re-appointed for 5 years

Kasari Govender re-appointed for 5 years
B-C's human rights commissioner has been reappointed by the legislature for another five years. Legislature members voted unanimously to reappoint Kasari Govender, following a recommendation from a parliamentary committee of government and opposition members.

Kasari Govender re-appointed for 5 years