Fiona's impact 'stark' at P.E.I. National Park - Action News
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PEI

Fiona's impact 'stark' at P.E.I. National Park

P.E.I. National Park will look much different when it reopens to the public, though there is no timeline on when that might be.

10 metres of shoreline lost in some areas, Parks Canada says

A look at some of the destruction from Fiona at P.E.I. National Park.

2 years ago
Duration 2:21
Sections of P.E.I. National Park are closed to visitors as Parks Canada crews assess the damage after post-tropical storm Fiona. CBC cameras were allowed access on Wednesday to see first-hand the destruction.

P.E.I. National Park will look much different when it reopens to the public, though there is no timeline on when that might be.

The park, which measures about 60 kilometres along the north shore,suffered significant damage from post-tropical storm Fiona, including toppled trees, badly damaged roadwaysand trails, and upto 10 metres of erosion in some parts of the coast.

"I think everyone is taken aback, I guess this is the way I would describe it," James Eastham of Parks Canada said during a media tour of the area around Brackley, Coveheadand Stanhope on Wednesday.

"The impact has been very stark and it's very obvious, and I think everyone's a little bit sad about what has been lost, but also pretty determined to recover from this and to move forward."

All sections of the park were hit to varying degrees, he said.

"One of the most stark images is up at Greenwich Beach. There's been about 10 metres of erosion on the beach and you can see where the dunes used to come and now where they are and it's really quite striking."

Parts of the road and multi-use trail were badly damaged. (Julien Lecacheur/Radio-Canada)

Piping plovers and bank swallows had already migrated south and were not present during the storm, Eastham said. But it is likely that there will be localized loss of habitat in some areas and gain of habitat in others.

"For example, bank swallows depend on exposed raw cliffwhere bank has eroded and slumped."

The damage to the coastline is evident in the Stanhope area. (Julien Lecacheur/Radio-Canada)

Parks Canada has dozens of people assessing the damage, including 15 people from across Canada with expertise in incident response and 11 wildland firefighting crew members who are working to clear trees. The rest are Atlantic region staff and some contractors.

No timeline has been set for when the park will reopen, Eastham said, but he expects it will come in stages. He said details will be shared as soon as they are available.

"We know that Islanders are eager to get back out and see the park and we want to welcome them back but for now we're asking people to just give us the time and space we need to work safely."

With files from Jessica Doria-Brown and Julien Lecacheur