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Things could have been worse without decades of fire prevention efforts, says Jasper mayor

Things could have been worse without decades of fire prevention efforts, says Jasper mayor

Decades of work to safeguard the community of Jasper against the threat of wildfires is being widely hailed for saving the town from total destruction.

During a news conference Monday, federal officials and the town’s mayor applauded the work of firefighters and decades of parks staff in helping to prevent further damage to the historic townsite. 

“This is a success,” Mayor Richard Ireland said in a news conference Monday. “We fortified our community and I credit Parks Canada for the work that they did on the landscape to protect our town.

“When the attack came, those defences worked,” said Ireland, who lost his own home to the flames. “We suffered casualties, absolutely, and it is so incredibly hurtful, but we did hold our ground.”

One week ago, 25,000 visitors and residents were ordered to flee the park as fires burning to the north and south flared dangerously amid high winds and dry conditions. On Wednesday, flames crossed the south edge of town, consuming entire neighbourhoods. By morning, one-third of the town’s structures were in ashes.

Early estimates suggest the wildfire could cost the insurance industry up to $700 million, making it one of the most expensive wildfire disasters in Canadian history. 

WATCH | Videos capture the last seven days in and around Jasper:

Through the lens: A week since the start of the Jasper wildfire

In the week since Jasper National Park’s residents and visitors were ordered to flee as wildfires approached, hours of video footage have emerged chronicling the evacuation, the firefight and the first glimpses of the ravaged town, where about 30 per cent of the structures were destroyed. This compilation brings together videos gathered by our crews or verified by our journalists.

Despite the losses and the daunting rebuild ahead, Ireland said things could have been much worse without years of preventative work including prescribed burns, thinning diseased forests and installing sprinkler systems.

No one was harmed and the majority of the structures in the community remain standing. 

“They …saved 70 per cent of our town, ” he said. “They did that because of their work on the ground, and they did that because of the wisdom and foresight that they had to create those defences for us.”

‘Hell on Earth’

During Monday’s news conference, Ron Hallman, Parks Canada president and CEO, said crews on the frontline faced “hell on Earth” conditions, despite having every resource needed to fight the fire.

The wall of…

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