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One-third of structures in Jasper damaged by massive wildfire | CBC News

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More than 350 buildings in Jasper, Alta., were damaged by a massive wildfire that ripped through the mountain townsite Wednesday evening, Jasper National Park said on social media Friday.

Of the 1,113 total structures within the town, 358 were destroyed, Jasper National Park said in an update posted to Facebook.

“Most of our residents will have a home to return to. Some will not,” Jasper Mayor Richard Ireland told reporters in Hinton, Alta., Friday. He said there is no timeline for residents to return.

“It will be a sad mix of people who have lost their home and their livelihoods … It’s going to be difficult,” Ireland said. “The pain that will be felt almost defies description.”

WATCH | ‘It has been a really difficult week,’ Jasper mayor says:

Raw: Video shows destruction between Cabin Creek Drive and Patricia Street

A video posted on social media walking the path north past the playground between Cabin Creek Drive and Patricia Street in Jasper, Alta.

Credit: Jeffrey Heyden-Kaye / X

Premier Danielle Smith said residents could be away for several weeks, at least, so the government is expediting its evacuation payment program for those displaced from Jasper and the national park.

“The fire is still out of control and it remains unsafe for people to return,” Smith told reporters in Hinton. “We can’t have unlimited re-entry into the park at this time.”

Payments are usually eligible to people who have been displaced by disaster for a week. Evacuees will receive $1,250 for each adult and $500 per child.

Two wildfires — one north, the other south — had threatened Jasper for days, forcing thousands to evacuate as they encroached on two highways. The south fire, described as a monster with flames reaching 100 metres high, reached Jasper late Wednesday, scorching portions of town.

Park officials confirmed Thursday night that the north and south fires had merged. The Jasper Wildfire Complex includes those fires and the Utopia wildfire, near Miette Hot Springs, that started July 19.

In all, the flames have burned an estimated 36,000 hectares, although strong winds, extreme fire behaviour and heavy clouds and smoke have posed challenges to accurately mapping the perimeter.

Smith and two provincial cabinet ministers said Thursday that preliminary estimates suggested 30 to 50 per cent of the town’s structures may have burned. Officials from Parks Canada, the lead agency on the fire, confirmed there was significant loss throughout the community, but did not offer an estimate until Friday.

The figures from Jasper National Park on Friday show that 32 per cent of all structures in the townsite were destroyed.

The west side of Jasper and southeast of Miette Avenue were hardest hit, officials said Friday, echoing previous assessments.

“It was the hard work of the firefighters and the front-line workers who protected Jasper from even more damage — and for that, we are all grateful,” Smith said.

Assessment of infrastructure damage is ongoing but all critical infrastructure — including the hospital, schools, activity centre and wastewater treatment plant — was saved, the national park’s statement said.

Certain conditions must be met before residents can return, such as cleanup and re-establishing emergency services, Stephen Lacroix, head of the Alberta Emergency Management Agency, told reporters in a virtual news conference Friday.

Smith said power and gas are still shut off but ATCO will spend the coming days going from building to building, trying to reactivate utilities.

On Friday, Ireland, Smith and federal Minister of Emergency Preparedness Harjit Sajjan toured the command centre in Hinton, Alta., that is orchestrating firefighting in Jasper and the national park.

WATCH | Raw: Video shows destruction between Cabin Creek Drive and Patricia Street:

Parts of Jasper incinerated as wildfire rages

Officials say up to 50 per cent of the structures in Jasper, Alta., have been destroyed as crews try to push back a wildfire that’s still threatening the community.

Hinton became the hive of operations after many first responders evacuated Jasper Wednesday evening, in part due to dangerously poor air quality on the front line.

“It is incredible to see the work that everyone is doing to fight this fire,” Smith said.

Firefighters in Jasper, about 365 kilometres west of Edmonton, are focusing on extinguishing hot spots on the town’s outskirts and trees surrounding the community, as well as structures, Jasper National Park said.

Rain and cooler temperatures have reduced fire activity in the area, but the flames are still out of control.

Emergency officials are promising to take advantage of a reprieve from the volatile weather that fuelled the wildfires, before forecasted warm weather arrives.

Crews are bracing for a long battle with the fire. Officials have said it could take weeks, if not longer, to gain the upper hand. 

  • Has your family been affected by the wildfires this season? Would your kids like to share their experience with CBC Kids News? Send an email to ask@cbc.ca

Smith and Prime Minister Justin Trudeau spoke Thursday about the wildfire situation in Jasper.

A statement from the Prime Minister’s Office said they discussed the resources and support being made available to the fire-ravaged town as well as other communities in Alberta being threatened by wildfires.

Trudeau and Smith have agreed to stay in regular contact as the situation unfolds.

WATCH | Parts of Jasper incinerated as wildfire rages:

Jasper wildfire emergency: How the first 72 hours unfolded

CBC’s Lauren Bird breaks down how the fast-moving wildfire situation in Jasper, Alta., unfolded and what it was like for the nearly 25,000 people who were forced to flee.

During a news conference Thursday, Sajjan said all necessary resources will be brought to bear on the fires. Given the intensity of the fires, every aid request from the province was approved by the federal government, he said.

“No stone will be left unturned,” Sajjan said.

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