:
Good afternoon, everyone.
I'd like to welcome our first panel, which is related to our study of the factors leading to the recent fires in Jasper National Park.
We have with us Mr. Ken Hodges, testifying as an individual. From the Alberta Fire Chiefs Association, we have Randy Schroeder, president. From the Department of Natural Resources, we have Glenn Hargrove, assistant deputy minister, Canadian forest service; Michael Norton, director general, northern forestry centre, who is online; and Dan Thompson, research scientist, forest fires, in person. From Forests Ontario, we have Jessica Kaknevicius, chief executive officer, also online.
Each witness or group of witnesses will have five minutes for opening statements.
We'll start with you, Mr. Hodges, for five minutes.
Before we start, for the witnesses who are here in person, we take good care not to damage the hearing of our interpreters, so please refrain from touching the stem of your microphone. If you are taking your earpiece off, please put it face down on the round decal that you'll find on the desk.
Mr. Hodges, the floor is yours.
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Thank you very much for having me here to speak about the experiences that I had prior to the fire.
I'd like to just note that I'm not here for political reasons. I'm here to provide information around the activities that occurred around the Jasper fire of July 22, 2024. I'd also like to note that my experience at that time was as a registered professional forester out of B.C. Currently, I am neither registered nor am I practising forestry. Also, I'd like to note that I'm neither a researcher nor a scientist. I was a registered professional forester, which is very different.
In relation to my work, I have 45 years of forest management experience. In relation to this beetle stuff and the fires, I have fire management experience in fighting fires, from spot fires up to project fires of 40,000 hectares or more. I was responsible for approving burning plans, approving ignition of those burning plans, and strategizing in the management of mountain pine beetles, including fall and burn and working with licensees in harvest strategies from baiting and logging to harvest strategies.
I'd like to note that the beetle population went from endemic to epidemic in a very short period of time. That was a result of warmer winters and an abundance of food supply.
I was involved in strategic planning and rehabilitation of mountain pine beetle fires. I worked with researchers to assess regeneration and cone viability after the beetle attacks, including secondary structure.
My related work is really diverse and includes silviculture, recreation, timber supply, planning and tenures. It goes on and on. We can get into a lot more detail if you so wish.
I looked at it and I have my own sense of what happened. I have an evaluation for you, from my perspective.
I found that Parks Canada staff were insufficiently trained in the situation of the beetles and the fire situation that existed in the park at the time. They are park rangers; they are not trained, experienced professional foresters.
The beetle program was a good start, but it was too little, too late. That was presented by Dr. Allan Carroll in a news article in Jasper. If they had looked at B.C., talked to the province and followed its recommendation in a timely manner, it would have potentially made a bit of a difference.
Nothing was done to address the landscape of the beetle-killed timber to prevent the megafire of July 22, 2024. What was done was insignificant and poorly thought out. It did nothing to protect the town from the Jasper fire complex. Even the work done would not be enough to stop a raging fire out of the west or the south in beetle stands. The town would have burned anyway.
The FireSmart program needs to be more than just cosmetic. If a community is serious about being fire-smart, then it should do more than a cosmetic approach of just removing a few trees or shrubbery.
There was communication with a fellow by the name of Rob Moore, who was an incident commander with 39 years of experience. His comment was that the fire complex was mismanaged in the first two days of the fire, from Monday, July 22, to Wednesday, July 24. He said that the fire complex was under-resourced and underestimated absolutely to the reality of fire science. That was a personal communication with Rob Moore.
Now, some of the recommendations I thought would be very beneficial are as follows.
Reform the Parks Canada structure and mandate.
Balance the value of social, economic and environmental issues when developing any type of strategy or plan. It cost almost a billion dollars in losses in Jasper—that's the latest estimate I've heard—not to mention the cost to the people who lost their homes, which resulted in stress, depression and potential suicides. Partial logging in mixed stands, with pruning and fuel management, costs about $500 a hectare. You can do about 10,000 hectares for about $5 million, so you can put some value there. The question I have is, where was the $80 million that was noted by the spent in relation to this fire?
Support those in the know—those who know the field and operations. Develop a plan that looks after the resources, with the communities as the primary objectives—so you can have a zonation—while addressing the balance of values to achieve ecological integrity. Have Parks Canada plans reviewed by professional foresters. The recommendation is to hire well-trained and experienced professionals familiar with the landscape in parks needing forest professional support.
Ensure that you have sufficient well-trained resources of staff and contractors, as well as equipment, to fight the fires. Don't depend upon provinces or others for their assistance, as they may be fighting their own battles.
Noting that there are two million hectares—
Thank you, Chair, for the opportunity to present to the Standing Committee on Environment and Sustainable Development.
My name is Randy Schroeder. I'm a fire chief. I'm the president of the Alberta Fire Chiefs Association and vice-chair of the CAFC national advisory council.
I want to begin by expressing my deepest gratitude to the first responders, including the many municipal fire services, the RCMP, sheriffs, EMS, contractors, the Alberta emergency management agency, Alberta Wildfire, Canada Task Force 2 and Parks Canada, who were all on the front lines during the incident. These brave individuals risked their own well-being to protect the town of Jasper, assisting in the evacuation of thousands and aiding in the ongoing recovery efforts.
I would also like to extend my special thanks to fire chief Mathew Conte of the Jasper Fire Department, who displayed extraordinary leadership and resilience throughout the crisis, despite the personal loss of his own home.
The AFCA has passed resolutions advocating that the Alberta government improve wildfire management by developing a long-term strategy for the resourcing and management of wildland fire events outside Alberta's forest protection areas, and inside as well. These resolutions call for the establishment of a working group consisting of subject matter experts, elected officials and senior municipal administrators to collaborate on this strategy. We're also collaborating with our municipal associations in this advocacy.
While the resolutions focus on the areas outside of the forest protection area, Alberta ministers Ellis' and Loewen's responses led to a recent increase in resources, budget and work toward the creation of a provincial wildfire mitigation strategy, on which the Alberta Fire Chiefs Association has provided input.
The AFCA is advocating to increase response readiness with an increase in wildland urban interface teams across the province. These teams proved critical in saving the historic Jasper Park Lodge, among other infrastructure in Jasper.
Alberta's wildfire season has been starting earlier, lasting longer and affecting larger areas in recent years, creating significant pressure on municipalities and forest services within and outside the FPA. Across the province, we consistently advocate for greater promotion of public education and greater financial support of FireSmart by increasing staffing and growing the program with coordinators at a local level throughout the province, creating public incentives and so on.
On a national level, we have also passed similar resolutions through the Canadian Association of Fire Chiefs, advocating for accessible, combined curriculum training to provide commonality and standardization among several entities, including Alberta's wildland urban interface training guidelines, the NFPA, the IAAF, the CIFFC and local municipal agencies. Multiple curricula pose a challenge to fire chiefs, who must balance the burden of time to train a volunteer among a host of other training requirements, and provide and sustain a local service level. The lack of coordination between these training resources presents challenges in standardization and available training.
The AFCA will refrain from commenting on the incident management specifics of this incident, recognizing the complexities the incident presented. The logistical geographical challenges, topography, fire behaviour, weather conditions, multi-jurisdictional governance and differentiating fuel types, along with the diverse agencies from across the province and beyond, were challenging in every way possible. Combine that with an interface that posed the challenges of protecting a community filled with historically important but very flammable construction and numerous buildings with cedar and pine shake roofs, clad with wooden siding, built with lightweight construction and beautified with flammable vegetation in almost every yard.
It was a testament to the efforts of all on the ground that so much was saved, including all of the town's critical infrastructure.
We all have a responsibility to increase our resiliency to fire. Government agencies, fire services, businesses and residents share in a combined effort to change our collective approach and behaviour in community planning, development and design, as well as in implementing change to what is already built. It is imperative that we apply rigorous risk assessment practices, effective fire management and appropriate funding to ensure that community protection measures are in place.
Finally, the AFCA supports the Canadian Association of Fire Chiefs' advocacy for the creation of a national fire administration. This national fire administration would serve as the nucleus of future national emergency management responses. It would be an organization entailing three types of coordination: between fire departments and federal departments on the fire, life safety and emergency management implications of national priority; between wildfire agencies and structural fire departments at a national level; and between—
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Thank you, Mr. Chair and committee, for this invitation. I'm grateful to be here to support this discussion on factors leading to the recent fires in Jasper National Park.
This is taking place on the traditional unceded territory of the Algonquin Anishinabe people.
The Canadian forest service at Natural Resources Canada plays an important, ongoing role in wildland fire management. We're the Government of Canada's primary source of federal wildland fire technical and scientific expertise. The CFS delivers essential functions to support wildland fire management across the country. This includes subject matter expertise to inform government reporting and response, the delivery of tools and information for national situational awareness and decision support, leadership on national strategic wildland fire policies and frameworks, and international engagement on wildland fire. We also work closely with other federal departments, such as Public Safety and Parks Canada.
Just days after the Jasper fire began, officials at Parks Canada requested support from CFS to study the factors that caused the rapid escalation and extreme fire behaviour taking place. CFS researchers and technicians were on site to conduct an analysis by August 1. Analysis is ongoing, and a report is in development. Research activity is concentrated on a number of aspects, including understanding the factors that contributed to the rapid ignition, acceleration, intensity and spread of the fire, its spread direction, the influence of wood killed by the mountain pine beetle on fuel consumption and fire intensity, and identifying areas of extreme fire behaviour.
There are some initial findings. Fire activity was exacerbated by conditions such as historic levels of drought, extreme high temperatures and low humidity, an abundance of dry fuels, and extreme fire-induced wind speeds that drove the fire to spread.
Wildland fire is a growing risk across Canada. Research tells us that we will continue to experience larger, more extreme fire events and behaviour in the coming years. We know that 2023 was off the charts in terms of fire activity and total area burned, and it looks like 2024 will rank second for total area burned over the last 20 years. This makes the work we are doing to transform wildland fire management more critical than ever. Programs such as the fighting and managing wildfires in a changing climate program and the wildfire resilient futures initiative are providing investments for community-based prevention and mitigation in order to build response and preparedness capacity while stimulating whole-of-society engagement that will contribute to wildfire resilience.
Through bodies such as the Canadian Council of Forest Ministers, or CCFM, and the Canadian Interagency Forest Fire Centre, also known as CIFFC, we work in continuous partnership with provinces and territories to ensure we are prepared to respond to wildland fire emergencies, and to build Canada's resilience over the longer term. Utilizing our scientific foundation, this includes delivery of cost-shared federal investments for specialized wildland fire equipment and firefighting training, as well as programming, prevention and mitigation. It also includes work with the CCFM to deliver Canada's first-ever wildland fire prevention and mitigation strategy, released this past June.
I am happy to be here with Dr. Dan Thompson, who is leading CFS research activities in Jasper, and director general Mike Norton, the lead for NRCan's wildland fire risk management program. He is joining us virtually to answer any questions you may have related to our ongoing analysis of the Jasper wildfire and the work under way to increase Canada's overall resilience to wildland fire.
Thank you.
Good afternoon, and thank you for having me today. My name is Jess Kaknevicius, and I am the CEO of Forests Ontario, a non-profit charity dedicated to conserving, restoring and growing Canada’s forests to sustain life and communities.
I'm calling today from the traditional territories of the Mississaugas of the Credit, the Anishinabe, the Chippewa, the Haudenosaunee and the Wendat peoples, now known as Toronto.
For the past 75 years, we have partnered with thousands of landowners to restore and steward their forests while providing meaningful education and community experiences. Our goal is to foster a deeper understanding of and connection to our forests. Every tree we plant is a crucial step in the collective action needed to mitigate the harmful effects of climate change and extreme weather. We are inspired to plant trees because our children and future generations deserve a world that is equitable, healthy and vibrant. While trees alone aren’t the only solution, they are certainly a vital part of it.
Before delving deeper into the role of forests, I want to acknowledge the significant impact the recent fires in Jasper have had on local communities. The destruction has affected not only properties but also the long-term well-being of the people of Jasper. Fire is frightening, and losing one’s home is devastating. We must recognize that a community has been deeply impacted, and they will need time to heal and rebuild.
I will start off by saying I am in no way an expert on fire. I have a background in forestry and over 20 years in the sector. I have experienced and learned from many in this field, and I am fortunate enough to have colleagues and partners who share their wisdom with me.
Fire is a natural process in the boreal forest, but last year's season prompted the public to question why these fires were occurring with such severity. There are many factors contributing to this, which I know you have discussed over the past few weeks, ranging from forest management and fire suppression to the broader impacts of climate change and the lack of resources for effective wildfire planning and management.
As we continue to face the consequences of climate change, including unprecedented wildfires both in Canada and around the world, it is imperative that we take action. This includes creating healthy, new forests and managing the diversity and health of our existing forests.
Today, I want to focus on recovery. Our organization is committed to collaborating with our partners to ensure that appropriate forest restoration activities occur after significant disturbances such as these fires. Over the past 20 years, Forests Ontario has supported the planting of more than 46 million trees, including through our national division, Forest Recovery Canada.
We believe that effective restoration begins with choosing the right seedlings for the long-term success of any planting project, and this starts with the seed source. That's why we emphasize the critical importance of selecting the right seeds for our restoration efforts. The trees we plant today must thrive in our current climate, but we also need to consider future conditions to ensure that our forests remain resilient. By planting climate-appropriate species, we enhance our chances for lasting success.
Forests Ontario is committed to leveraging scientific research, collaborating effectively with indigenous communities to incorporate traditional knowledge, and implementing best practices. We recognize that these elements are critical for the long-term success of any restoration project. Our commitment to collaboration and knowledge sharing ensures that we make informed decisions on the landscape.
Forest recovery is essential for us to continue investing in, as newly growing trees play a crucial role in climate mitigation by sequestering carbon. They also stabilize soils, reduce the risk of floods, build community resilience and have the potential to develop into long-lived forest products that continue to store carbon.
Much like fire prevention and management, the stewardship of our forests is a long-term endeavour. We must think beyond the year a tree is planted and focus on the ongoing management of these sites to ensure their resilience. This long-term management requires sustained investments, prompting us to adopt a longer-term perspective in all of our work.
My three recommendations today are as follows.
The first is long-term investment. Investments in our forests must be maintained over the long term. Whether for forest restoration, forest management or fire management and prevention, a one-time investment is insufficient to ensure the ongoing health of our forest ecosystems, especially as climate change increases pressures on them.
The second is the importance of restoration. We cannot underestimate the need for restoration. Forests are vital for soil stabilization, maintaining water quantity and quality, flood mitigation and proving habitat for wildlife. They also support biodiversity and ensure that communities have access to natural spaces that are crucial for mental and physical health.
My final recommendation is to integrate science and indigenous knowledge. As we work toward restoring forests, we should lead with indigenous-led practices and leverage scientific research. This approach will help us make informed decisions about the right species to plant, the appropriate methods for planting and the best practices for fostering healthy forest growth.
Thank you for inviting me today.
In some wildland fires, we observe what we call an “ember shower”. If you see a kid's trampoline or tarps in a yard, all these little spots are indicative of the embers landing on flammable surfaces that melt but don't actually combust.
We conducted observations of the fuel treatments near the railroad, on the south side of town, along the highway and, basically, between town and Whistlers Campground. I would ask for maps from Parks Canada, because we don't have those right in front of us. I wasn't responsible for mapping that. We did walk through those fuel treatments, and we did document about a 70% reduction in the frequency of trees actually burning.
The type of fire we observed while we walked through those recently burned stands was what we call “surface fire”. There were some trees that were burning, but the primary mode of that fire was to travel along the surface, without producing that number of embers. When we went to look at the tarps, both in the parks compound and in the middle of the community, we did not see that ember shower that we observed in places like Slave Lake in 2011 or in Fort McMurray. I was there after the fact in Fort McMurray, and I saw an ember shower. Despite looking in many places, we did not see the same intensity of ember shower in Jasper, despite similarly severe fire weather. The underlying drought conditions were similar.
We have the evidence, and we're happy to show some evidence that, for the 500-metre buffer around the community where there was that fuel treatment, we did not document the same ember shower. Some embers did ignite some structures, but not with the same intensity.
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Thank you very much, Mr. Chair.
I would like to thank the witnesses. They have mostly left, but I would like to thank the ones who are still online, as well as anybody else who's testified to this committee on this very important topic over the last couple of weeks, for their work.
For those who were on the front lines, whether they were printing pamphlets to ensure that everybody was aware of the evacuation plan, putting out fires, leading groups and making decisions or just helping out their neighbours, I want to thank them. I'm glad that this committee, collectively, is willing to provide sympathy and gratitude to those first responders and the people who are making those decisions.
I also want to take this opportunity to express sympathy and gratitude to the family of 24-year-old Morgan Kitchen, who lost his life fighting fires in the Jasper wildfire incident of 2024. That was a true tragedy.
We heard from a lot of really important experts, frontline responders and various levels and jurisdictions of government. I think we can all accept that it's tough to talk about this stuff when Canadians' lives and livelihoods are so dramatically impacted.
However, Mr. Chair, there were also a few lines crossed throughout these meetings. I referenced one earlier regarding an email chain that was shared in one Conservative member's tweets. Thankfully, that tweet has now been deleted, but tweeting out a professional public servant's name out of context and implying that the person was responsible for some wrongdoing resulted in death threats. That can be avoided by being responsible, diligent and honest, and by just doing our jobs the way people elected us to—with integrity and without trying to overly politicize natural disasters and these types of tragedies for points.
I seek to be accountable to Canadians for every tax dollar, decision and choice made by this government, but that doesn't involve tweeting out the names of particular people, including email addresses and personal information, on social media to score political points. As I said before, that is disgusting and it is beneath any member of Parliament to do that.
It's also beneath members of Parliament to invite people to this committee who have a public and demonstrated lack of integrity. Unfortunately, I received an email—to my personal email—regarding the conduct of a witness who came to this committee, and that is the conduct of Mr. Kris Liivam. This is disgusting, but I'm going to read the tweet that was sent to me today, because I think it's important that everybody hears it so that we understand the kind of conduct this witness undertakes on their social media. In response to a tweet from somebody regarding something on a football chat, Mr. Kris Liivam posted—trigger warning, this is bad—“All women are whores. Some take the cash up front, as in this case. Others wait a few years and take your house, half your savings, and you're stuck paying alimony for years.” On Twitter, he identifies as “Albertan but not Canadian”. In the email, the person who wrote to me today indicated that they also witnessed anti-vaccine, anti-residential schools repetitive far-right tropes, conspiracy theories, and anti-diversity, equity and inclusion rants, so it doesn't stop at the offensive characterization of women. They have also demonstrated a willingness to delete tweets because they're often flagged, even by Twitter, in this one case, as “Visibility limited: This post may violate X's rules against hateful content.”
This is an honourable place. It is an honourable place to work, and I think we need to demonstrate a diligence in making sure that the people we invite to this committee don't express those types of hateful and misogynistic viewpoints on their social media so willingly.
It goes beyond just that, Mr. Chair. A lot of MPs on the Conservative side who have come to this committee have continually suggested that the federal government did nothing to prepare. They lead their questions by saying that Parks Canada was not prepared and that they did nothing to prepare, despite the evidence that both ministers presented—the and the —with respect to the massive incremental funding that was dedicated to fireproofing and fire-safing the town of Jasper and Jasper National Park over the past five years.
In front of me, the content of my question, which I was going to ask one of the witnesses before we had to end that session, is the fact that funding for the overall fire program for Parks Canada in Jasper between 2011 and 2015 averaged between $13 million and $14 million. Since then, under our government, it's been $20 million, then upwards of $35 million, then $25 million, and then, last year, $79 million. That was to fireproof Jasper and to save lives, livelihoods and structures.
As we heard from Parks Canada officials, certainly more could have been done. More will be done in the future, but I also looked at a map of Jasper National Park. It's over one million hectares. The fire-affected area was about 39,000 hectares, and 39,000 divided by a million is a small amount. This fire was started by lightning, not by anything else. There are lots of causes of wildfires.
Our government has invested heavily in Jasper in forest management, in undercutting, in removal and in studies. It has spent millions of dollars, Mr. Chair, as I just said—four, five, even six times more than the Conservatives did in the past.
Do you know what it is, Mr. Chair? It's an outright rejection and an unwillingness by the Conservatives to acknowledge the role that climate change plays in the proliferation of these wildfires and the enhancement of the severity and frequency of these wildfires. They won't say “climate change”. They won't acknowledge the scientists who come here to say that the reason these are getting so much worse is climate change, and the reason climate change is getting so much worse is our emissions, primarily driven by the oil sands in Alberta. They won't acknowledge any of that, so they want to blame park management.
Mr. Chair, it's disgusting. It's disgusting to try to score political points off a tragedy like this, a natural disaster like this. It's unfortunate that we can't all agree that when these non-partisan officials are doing their jobs, when they're creating these plans and evacuation routes, and when their work results in zero fatalities of civilians, that's a success. Thirty per cent of Jasper burning is an absolute tragedy, but we also know that it could have been a heck of a lot worse, and we know that if we had been investing at the Conservative level of 10 years ago, it would have been a lot worse.
Mr. Chair, to say that I'm disappointed in the Conservative side and their tactics over the last couple of weeks is an understatement. I regret that they have gotten to the point where they're inviting people of such disrepute to this committee to provide testimony. I'm disgusted that they've used the names of non-partisan officials, who were just doing their jobs—from emails that they received in confidence due to their parliamentary privilege—in social media posts. This has resulted in death threats to those public officials.
Mr. Chair, I was eager to undertake this study, because it's important. Canadians and Jasperites deserve answers. They deserve accountability. I spoke this week to a Jasperite who was involved in the unified command. They expressed gratitude for shedding light on some of these issues. They also, as a Jasperite, expressed deep disgust with the politicization of this and these meetings.
That's what the problem really comes to. My people in Jasper are saying that they're very concerned about the northwest. If there wasn't enough fire-smarting done in the south and one-third of the town burned, what are the odds, then, when the next fire comes from the west? They feel that there wasn't enough done. How are they going to be secure, knowing that they're going into the 2025 fire season and that they're potentially going to be burned out? That's something we really need to get down to. How are we going to protect the rest of the town? We've already lost one-third, and 2,000 people are homeless. We don't want to start rebuilding structures only to find out that they'll potentially be burned down again. That's my concern. If we don't really get down to the meat of it....
It's not necessarily.... I don't want to place blame on anybody, to be perfectly honest with you. I want to get down to the facts. What can we do to make sure this doesn't happen again? Everyone is looking at it as, “Yes, Jasper was bad, but we protected it.” That's great, but what about Lake Louise? What about Banff? What about Canmore? We have other areas that are right in the national park or adjacent to a national park that are in the same kind of situation. If they've managed the forest the same way in Banff as they did in Jasper, is Banff now up as the next place that's going to burn?
That's what I think everyone is really concerned about in Alberta, in the mountain park region. Are we doing the best we can to protect the communities? I don't think that's the case. If you can honestly say that we did everything possible and one-third of the town still burned, well, I don't believe we did everything we possibly could.
We heard from different people on the fire management. We heard from different people on forest management. I think what this really comes down to is forest management and making sure that we are actually managing the forests properly. When you have huge amounts of fuel sitting there—essentially, dead trees from the mountain pine beetle kill—it's like gasoline. When you fire-smart within—
:
Are you sure I can go on before anyone else interjects? Okay, I'll try.
I was talking about forest management. We were saying how the mountain pine beetle had a devastating effect on the amount of fuel that was sitting there. That's what really caused Jasper to burn—the high, intense flames. It was miles outside of town, and once it got to that intense fire, there was nothing stopping it. Absolutely, they are right. I am not disputing that.
The point, though, is this: If we had done better forest management in close proximity to the townsite—I'm talking about five or six miles away—to clear out a lot of that deadfall, there wouldn't have been that continual fuel, always coming with that same mass of fire. That's where our problem lies. We didn't do a better job of forest management.
Yes, let's not deny that it was dry, or that it was a hot summer. What are we doing to minimize that? All I'm hearing is, “Well, you can't do much because that's just climate change. That's it. There's nothing else.” Well, that's poor management, as far as I am concerned. That's all it comes down to, just stating a quote or putting a little tweet out there. That is not proper fire management.
Is Mr. van Koeverden making another point of order, or is he just rambling there?
I think we all have the same aim, which is to get to the bottom of this and make sure that all the precautions were taken and that this doesn't happen again.
I think the witnesses we've had so far have shed some light. It seems to me that if there is a joint investigation being done by the federal and provincial governments, the agencies, the firefighters, the town of Jasper and everybody who's on the ground, they're going to have much more insight into what happened and what should be done than we do at this committee. I have no problem with us providing oversight or making recommendations, but it seems to me expedient to let the experts and the people who were there do the work, and then we can ask questions about that. Bringing in other witnesses like the witnesses we've had.... Some of them have been excellent, but I just feel like we're not the experts. People on the ground who lived there were very concerned about their homes and about their town.
This is going on. I feel like it's the job of a committee to provide oversight, but not to do this investigation, which is looking into the events that led to the wildfire spread, assessing the response strategies, and identifying potential improvements in managing such incidents in the future. It's also looking at the environmental and economic impacts of it, and there are efforts to review the effectiveness of the firefighting strategy, the coordination between federal and provincial agencies, and the long-term recovery plans.
For us to go ahead with more meetings on this without this information, which is going to be undertaken at great expense to taxpayers, being provided to us, I feel is irresponsible. Why don't we wait until this has at least commenced and perhaps has had some progress? Then let's resume for a couple of meetings to review or to assess what they're saying, rather than bring all the same people here.
That's my point. I'm speaking in favour of the subamendment.
I will communicate through the chair, as is required of me under the standing orders of this committee.
I will strongly disagree that any effort to ensure that the right witnesses come to this meeting and that we do not just check a first nations box to say, “Yes, we consulted indigenous people in this study”...which I think is gross and something that has been done before that we could probably avoid. We need to ensure that we have the right people come, to adequately protect people from wildfires in the future, given the over-proliferation of them. I'm not afraid of saying that they are made worse and more frequent by climate change.
It's not something that you'll hear from the Conservatives, ever. They just want to continue to tabloidize this issue and score political points on the back of this tragedy. When you just google “Jasper wildfire investigation”, the first five things that come up are the Facebook pages of Conservative MPs saying, “Breaking news: The testimony that we've heard on it....” They're trying to use this American-style political game to tabloidize a tragedy, which is reprehensible, Mr. Chair.
That's what we should be talking about, the conduct of bringing disreputable people to this place to provide testimony that is clearly false. When you just look at the facts, it's the opposite. There is a complete abdication and avoidance of talking about climate change, which makes these events more frequent and more—
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I would suggest that parties submit their witnesses by Friday at 4 p.m.
We've run through the speakers list on the amendment. Can we vote on the amendment? Okay.
(Amendment agreed to: yeas 11; nays 0 [See Minutes of Proceedings])
[Translation]
Now that the amendment has been adopted, let's go back to the motion as amended.
I had a speaking list, but Mr. Long is telling me he no longer wishes to speak, and, although I wouldn't want to point out his absence, Mr. Godin is not here.
[English]
Ms. Taylor Roy, do you have anything more to say? Okay.
[Translation]
We can now vote on the motion as amended.
(Motion as amended agreed to: yeas 11; nays 0) [See Minutes of Proceedings])