Close X
Wednesday, November 27, 2024
ADVT 
National

$30M upgrade coming to dangerous B.C. logging road

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 11 Sep, 2020 10:41 PM
  • $30M upgrade coming to dangerous B.C. logging road

Improvements are coming to a narrow logging road on Vancouver Island where members of the local First Nations as well as two university students have lost their lives.

B.C. Indigenous Relations Minister Scott Fraser and leaders of the Huu-ay-aht First Nation announced Friday their governments will spend more than $30 million combined over three years to make Bamfield Road safer.

Sunday marks the first anniversary of a bus crash that killed two University of Victoria students and injured many others.

"We cannot undo what has happened, the unfathomable heartbreak for families. But today we are looking ahead to a safer road that will better protect everyone who travels on it," Fraser said.

Forty-five students and two teaching assistants were headed to the Bamfield Marine Sciences Centre aboard a chartered bus that moved over for an approaching vehicle and rolled down an embankment.

First-year biology students John Geerdes of Iowa City and Emma Machado of Winnipeg, both 18, died.

In the wake of the crash, the provincial government struck a working group with Huu-ay-aht members and local forest companies to develop safety upgrades for consideration.

The upgrades follow years of advocacy from members of the First Nation and other local communities. Hereditary chief Derek Peters said his grandfather died on the road.

"This is a very respectful way for us to honour and not forget the lives that have been lost on that road," he said.

The 76-kilometre road begins at Port Alberni and is the only road link for residents in and around the Bamfield area.

Plumes of dust in the summer obscure visibility while winter rains regularly lead to washouts, making it impassable to even emergency vehicles, Fraser said.

Under the agreement, the province will spend $25.7 million and the Huu-ay-aht will spend $5 million and manage the project with technical support from consulting firm Urban Systems. The Huu-ay-aht will also provide resources, including gravel from pits on their treaty lands, which the government said is expected to result in significant cost saving.

The improvements include seal-coat hard surfacing and new culverts to improve drainage.

Chief Coun. Robert Dennis Sr. said all those who've lost loved ones share a common grief.

"We share some heavy burdens and we share losses of loved ones and I'll look forward to the day when I can meet the families of those students who were lost," Dennis says.

In addition to improving health and safety on the road, the improvements will generate economic activity for the small coastal communities.

MORE National ARTICLES

O'Toole names shadow cabinet

O'Toole names shadow cabinet
Ontario MP Michael Chong is taking a big step up to become the Conservatives' critic for foreign affairs, considered one of the most high-profile portfolios.

O'Toole names shadow cabinet

Judge who asked woman to remove hijab apologizes

Judge who asked woman to remove hijab apologizes
A letter of apology from Quebec court Judge Eliana Marengo was read out today at a hearing of the province's judicial council.

Judge who asked woman to remove hijab apologizes

Commercial rent aid gets one more month

Commercial rent aid gets one more month
The Liberals say the program that aims to help small businesses with their rent or lease costs will be extended for this month, unveiling the details one week after rent was due.

Commercial rent aid gets one more month

Green party membership nearly doubles

Green party membership nearly doubles
Party officials say the Greens added 15,000 new people to their membership list during the campaign.

Green party membership nearly doubles

Canadians demand Iran hunger-striker be freed

Canadians demand Iran hunger-striker be freed
Nasrin Sotoudeh was hospitalized briefly on Monday in Tehran but has since been returned to the women's ward of the notorious Evin Prison, where she has been held since June 2018, says Yonah Diamond, one of her Montreal-based lawyers.

Canadians demand Iran hunger-striker be freed

N.B. Liberal leader says it's not time for cuts

N.B. Liberal leader says it's not time for cuts
Vickers told a business audience today he would put the province's economic development agency — Opportunity New Brunswick — "on steroids."

N.B. Liberal leader says it's not time for cuts