Vancouver Sun

‘A traumatic, stressful event’

ALBERTA WILDFIRE TOOK MENTAL TOLL ON STAFF AT WATERTON LAKES PARK

- lauren Krugel

The pain would have been excruciati­ng for two female black bears found in Waterton Lakes National Park after the Kenow Mountain wildfire tore through the rugged mountain landscape last September.

One was found lying on its back with severe thirddegre­e burns on the bottoms of all four feet. The other was barely able to walk, apparently blind and had its ears completely singed off.

A wildlife health report obtained by The Canadian Press says putting the animals down was the only humane option and describes how Waterton staff shot them before Parks Canada’s wildlife unit arrived.

“This was a traumatic, stressful event for some of the staff involved and assistance by mental health profession­als may be required in future to help with the psychologi­cal trauma resulting from these interventi­ons,” says the report.

The document was one of several obtained under the Access to Informatio­n Act that highlighte­d the trying circumstan­ces Parks Canada staffers faced as they contended with a disaster the agency described in one analysis as unpreceden­ted in its severity and impact.

On Aug. 30, a lightning strike sparked a fire in British Columbia’s Flathead Valley, which spread toward the boundary with Alberta under hot, dry conditions.

Waterton was evacuated on Sept. 8 as the fire was poised to spread into the southweste­rn Alberta park.

The day before the evacuation, Pat Thomsen, executive director of Pacific Mountain and National Parks, wrote to the national office concerned that Waterton employees would not qualify for travel status in the event they would have to live temporaril­y in Pincher Creek, 55 kilometres away.

Travel status enables employees to be reimbursed for costs such as transporta­tion, accommodat­ion and meals.

“This is not a helpful nor compassion­ate answer and needs to be reconsider­ed,” Thomsen wrote. “Your interventi­on is requested ASAP.”

Parks Canada said in an emailed statement that employees who lived within park boundaries were forced out between Sept. 8 and Sept. 21 and were still required to work were given travel status consistent with the agency’s travel policy.

The fire jumped into the park three days after the evacuation and then spread onto adjacent grassland, prompting evacuation orders in nearby communitie­s.

Notes for a phone call between Privy Council clerk Michael Wernick and Waterton superinten­dent Ifan Thomas recounted how just as Waterton staff were assisting with those evacuation­s, one Parks Canada employee learned his house had burned.

“Despite his personal situation, this employee continued to conduct the evacuation with the RCMP during the night and returned to work at 5 a.m. the next morning.”

The park’s visitor centre and other buildings were lost, but the townsite was spared — an outcome top brass at Parks Canada credited to the staff who installed firefighti­ng sprinklers, removed combustibl­e material and made other preparatio­ns as the fire approached.

“As the area commander and field unit superinten­dent both affirmed, if it had not been for your prevention efforts, it is clear that the Waterton Lakes townsite would have been lost,” Parks Canada CEO Daniel Watson wrote in a Sept. 15 letter thanking employees.

He commended them for standing “generously, compassion­ately and resolutely in the face of the catastroph­ic,” regardless of lack of sleep or having lost homes in the fire.

Watson acknowledg­ed the emotional toll the fire may take and committed that the agency would do whatever it could to offer support.

“We recognize that many of you have suffered personal loss or may have had to watch others suffer catastroph­ic loss … Some days we are a team. Today we are a family.”

Parks Canada said immediatel­y after the fire, the agency provided mentalheal­th support to all of its personnel, as well as staff from assisting agencies and contractor­s. All were invited to group counsellin­g sessions and counsellor­s were also made available one on one.

“Materials and informatio­n on mental health and wellness has been provided to supervisor­s of Parks Canada staff who were involved in the Kenow wildfire, so that they can help direct staff seeking assistance related to managing stress, mental health, or wellness concerns.”

 ?? DAVID ROSSITER / THE CANADIAN PRESS FILES ?? Parks Canada said that immediatel­y after the wildfire, the agency provided mental-health support to all of its personnel as well as staff from assisting agencies.
DAVID ROSSITER / THE CANADIAN PRESS FILES Parks Canada said that immediatel­y after the wildfire, the agency provided mental-health support to all of its personnel as well as staff from assisting agencies.

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