Fire-stricken Jasper braces for winter as it adapts to new normal
A bright green Welcome Home banner still hangs on the awning of Nesters Market on the main drag in Jasper, Alta.
It’s been three months since residents were allowed to return to the Rocky Mountain tourist town, after a devastating wildfire hit the national park and scorched one-third of the community’s homes and businesses. An estimated 2,000 people were displaced.
A construction site on the east edge of town, one of four where crews are working overtime to put up quick-form housing, was briefly covered in snow Friday. Many snowfalls are expected to blanket the area over the next few months.
The new public housing, which is costing the province $112 million, isn’t expected to be ready for renters until spring.