Now or Never

After a wildfire, how do you rebuild your life? Stories from the heart of Jasper

As this fire season comes to an end and the tourist town prepares for winter, Now or Never meets Jasperites as they navigate grief and new beginnings together.

3 months after wildfire took a third of the town, how are people in Jasper recovering?

A woman stands in front of a burned home.
Lorraine Stanko stands in front of the charred remains of her home in Jasper, holding a photo of what her house looked like before the fire. (Ify Chiwetelu/CBC)

Jasper is one of Canada's oldest and most iconic national parks, with its picturesque setting in the Alberta Rockies.

This summer, it earned new notoriety as one of the growing number of Canadian communities ravaged by wildfire. 

At the height of the mountain park's tourist season, more than 20,000 people fled Jasper National Park, after an evacuation order on July 22.

Days later the fire reached the town, taking a third of the structures in the Municipality of Jasper, including 800 homes.

Rebuilding after the wildfire will take years, and parts of the scenic landscape will take decades to regrow. The tragedy also took the life of Morgan Kitchen, a 24-year-old firefighter from Calgary who was struck by a falling tree.

LISTEN |  Life in the aftermath of Jasper wildfire:

Three months after the fire burned more than 32,500 hectares, locals are finding a way to rebuild their lives next to the charred remains of what they lost.

As this fire season comes to an end and the tourist town prepares for winter, Now or Never meets Jasperites as they navigate grief and new beginnings together. 

Three people standing at a viewpoint near a river.
Tour guide Joe Urie brings Trevor and Ify on a hike up Old Fort Point, overlooking the wildfire's path around Jasper, Alta. (Ariel Fournier/CBC)

Joe Urie, a Métis tour guide and longtime local, brings hosts Ify Chiwetelu and Trevor Dineen up Old Fort Point, for an overlook view of what Jasper looks like today. Urie was one of the first to spot the wildfire's northern fire while out on a tour with tourists. 

Before that day, many warned Jasper was vulnerable to a wildfire. For the last eight years, he had a sign by his front door that read, "When the fire hits, grab the kids, the dogs, the hardware box, and the photos."

In the aftermath, he said he still believes in the regenerative power of fire, and what comes next.

Man showing his tattooed arm to two other people.
Tour guide Joe Urie shows Ify and Trevor the tattoo he got after the Jasper wildfire, as a reminder of the regenerative power of forest fires. (Ariel Fournier/CBC)

Lorraine Stanko has been searching through the debris of her friends' and neighbours' homes, trying to find valuables that weren't destroyed by the wildfire.

She hopes to bring them, and herself, closure, after her own home in town burned down. 

A woman looks toward a burned home.
Lorraine Stanko gives a tour of her burned-out home, where she and a group of volunteers sifted through rubble to find what could be salvaged. (Ify Chiwetelu/CBC)

Blocks away from where Stanko's house once stood, Sviatoslav Rud and Nina Egorova's rented home is still standing, but it is still uninhabitable due to smoke damage.

They are sleeping in a borrowed RV in front of their house even as the temperatures dip amid a housing shortage in town, that's worsened since the fire. 

Two people stand in front of a holiday trailer.
Sviatoslav Rud and Nina Egorova are living in an RV while their smoke-damaged rented home is being repaired. (Ariel Fournier/CBC)

Firefighter Kim Stark battled the blaze in town as her own house burned to the ground. Now she is teaching her three young children about what home really means. And she is learning from her children how to navigate grief, and accept that the "naughty" fire didn't know any better. 

Now or Never joins locals as they grab a plate at the town's community dinner, a 20-year-old tradition in Jasper that has new meaning and urgency.

The town first started offering free dinners for ski hill workers during a slow ski season. After the snow came, and things picked up, the dinners kept happening and it became a night for the whole town to come together. 

People getting food at a buffet.
Volunteers at the Jasper community dinner served free meals to 500 locals at the first gathering this season. (Ariel Fournier/CBC)

This meal marks the first one of the season.

The gatherings typically start in January, but it started early this year, after the local legion began offering free dinners for locals in the aftermath of the fire, and the municipality was inspired to bring back the event early. 

Stephen Nelson has been living in a Hinton hotel for the past three months since his seniors' lodge burned down.

After 16 years in Jasper with no stable home, he moved into the lodge 11 days before the evacuation order. Now he is preparing to leave Jasper for good — "the love of his life" that won't seem to let him stay.

Man stands near burned-down building.
Stephen Nelson visits what remains of the seniors' lodge he moved into 11 days before the evacuation order in Jasper. (Submitted by Stephen Nelson)