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Jasper, Alta., re-entry details to be announced Monday, mayor says

A team of government and Parks Canada officials will announce on Monday when residents of Jasper, Alta., can return to their community, according to Mayor Richard Ireland.

Requirements for return 'continue to be achieved at an accelerating pace,' Mayor Richard Ireland says

A green and brown building beside a pile of debris.
About one-third of the buildings in Jasper, Alta., were destroyed by a massive wildfire that hit the townsite on July 24. (Parks Canada)

Residents of Jasper, Alta., will learn Monday when they can return home, according to Mayor Richard Ireland.

A monster wildfire that forced thousands to evacuate Jasper National Park ripped through the historic townsite nearly three weeks ago, incinerating about one-third of its homes and businesses.

On Monday, members of the unified command, made up of Parks Canada and Municipality of Jasper representatives, will release the date of re-entry and details about how it will work, Ireland announced during a virtual news conference Saturday.

"Returning residents safely to their homes has been and continues to be an overriding goal of the incident management team," he said.

The "precise terms" for re-entry are still being tweaked, he added.

Inthe days after the fire hitJasper, some government officials speculated that evacuees could be displaced for several weeks.

Required re-entry criteria were eventually developed, listing things that had to be in place before evacuees could return, such as improved air quality and restored critical services.

Officials working in the town and responding to the wildfire have provided progress updates, but until Saturday, there had been no hint aboutwhen re-entry could occur.

"[Residents and local business owners] have clung to the prospect of re-entry as some reward not, of course, for their immeasurable suffering, but for their enduring patience and understanding," Ireland said.

"Monday, they will know."

Re-entry criteria "continue to be achieved at an accelerating pace," Ireland said, addinghe hopes news of the impending information will help comfort evacuees.

The Jasper-Alberta-Canada intergovernmental redevelopment committee, which will have representatives from all levels of government, was established to oversee, coordinate and advise elected officials to address needs in Jasper as the community recovers, the municipality said in a Facebook post Friday.

The committee will first focuson transitional and interim housing needs, according to a provincial government news release.

The Jasper Wildfire Complex, a group of fires burning in the national park, is still out of control. The complex is among 116 wildfires burning throughout the province as of 1 p.m. MT Saturday, according to the Alberta Wildfire dashboard.

Cooler temperatures and rainfall helped firefighters make progress on the Jasper wildfire, said Jonathan Large, a Parks Canada incident commander, during Saturday's virtual news conference.

A sign in front of a destroyed gas station.
Restoring critical businesses, such as gas stations, are part of the requirements for re-entry to Jasper. (Josh McLean/CBC)

The fire spans about 33,000 hectares, Large said. The north edge of the fire, which poses a risk to the town, is 80-per cent contained.

He acknowledged there is ample unburnt brush west and northwest of Jasper that could fuel flames toward the townsite, should the fire spread. But Parks Canada officials are confident the town and surrounding areas are well protected from the potential risk, he said.

"We're getting off of the reactive measures and able to get into some more proactive measures and reinforce some of those lines as well," Large said.

"A lot of those actions are going on simultaneous, now, with the suppression efforts that we're doing. So, I feel the town's in very good shape."