Close X
Saturday, September 21, 2024
ADVT 
National

Advocacy Group Formed By Families Who Lost Loved Ones In Semi-Truck Crashes

The Canadian Press, 06 Mar, 2020 07:54 PM

    A new non-profit group advocating road safety has been formed nearly two years after a deadly hockey bus crash in rural Saskatchewan.

     

    Safer Roads Canada was founded by families, including some Humboldt Broncos parents, who have lost loved ones in crashes involving semi-trucks.

     

    Sixteen people were killed and 13 were injured when an inexperienced truck driver ran a stop sign and barrelled into the path of the junior team's bus in Saskatchewan in April 2018.

     

    Executive director Pattie Fair's husband, Steve Babij, was killed in another crash involving a semi-truck driven by an inexperienced driver who lost control in Rogers Pass, B.C.

     

    She says everyone deserves to get home safely and that means ensuring drivers are well trained.

     

    Fair says statistics from Transport Canada show that there are 400 fatal crashes a year involving heavy vehicles such as semis.

     

    Broncos parents add that they want to do everything they can to make Canada's roads safer.

     

    "Our goal is to spare others the hardship of losing someone they love to a senseless crash that could have been prevented," Carol Brons, a director of Safer Roads Canada, said in a release Friday.

     

    Brons, who lives in Lake Lenore, Sask, lost her daughter, Dayna Brons, who was an athletic therapist for the Broncos and died in the days after the crash.

     

    Ginny Hunter, whose son Logan was also killed, said the group will push for changes by governments.

     

    "We commend Saskatchewan, Alberta, Manitoba and Ontario for already implementing mandatory entry-level training programs, but more needs to be done," said the B.C. resident. "A driver in any other province or territory can still obtain a Class 1 licence and be insured without completing a mandatory training program."

     

    Hunter and Fair said they have expressed their concerns to the British Columbia government, because roads such as the Trans-Canada through the Rogers Pass and the Coquihalla Highway are some of the most dangerous in the country.

     

    Federal Transport Minister Mark Garneau and provincial ministers announced national safety code standards for entry-level training of commercial truck drivers in February.

     

    "As we approach the two-year anniversary of the Humboldt Broncos bus crash, Canada has not announced a timeline to implement this national standard," said Chris Joseph, whose son Jaxon was killed in the Broncos crash. "This should be a priority and we deserve some answers."

     

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Day Of Weird News | Granpa Fights Off Robber With Killer Moves | Human Brain Mailed In Jar To USA

    Human Brain Mailed From Toronto In Canada Post Shipment To Wisconsin Seized At U.S. Border

    Day Of Weird News | Granpa Fights Off Robber With Killer Moves | Human Brain Mailed In Jar To USA

    Canadians From Coronavirus-Stricken Cruise Ship In Japan To Fly Home Thursday: Champagne

    Canadians who have spent weeks on a coronavirus-stricken cruise ship in Japan will board a government-chartered plane to take them home Thursday evening, the foreign affairs minister says.

    Canadians From Coronavirus-Stricken Cruise Ship In Japan To Fly Home Thursday: Champagne

    Judge Extends Order Suspending Legal Proceedings Against Three Tobacco Companies

    Judge Extends Order Suspending Legal Proceedings Against Three Tobacco Companies
    TORONTO - An Ontario court has extended an order suspending legal proceedings against three major tobacco companies as they try to negotiate a settlement with their creditors.    

    Judge Extends Order Suspending Legal Proceedings Against Three Tobacco Companies

    CP Rail Conductor Fired For Social Media Posts Awarded Money, But Not Reinstatement

    CALGARY - An arbitrator says a former Canadian Pacific train conductor who was fired over social media posts is entitled to monetary compensation, but not to getting her job back at the railroad.

    CP Rail Conductor Fired For Social Media Posts Awarded Money, But Not Reinstatement

    Blair Says RCMP Have Met Wet'suwet'en Conditions, Calls For End To Blockades

    Blair Says RCMP Have Met Wet'suwet'en Conditions, Calls For End To Blockades
    Public Safety Minister Bill Blair says the RCMP in British Columbia has offered to move its officers to a town away from the area where traditional leaders of the Wet'suwet'en First Nation have been opposing a pipeline project on their territory.

    Blair Says RCMP Have Met Wet'suwet'en Conditions, Calls For End To Blockades

    Top Court Decision Allows Former N.S. Crown Lawyer To Sue Premier For Libel

    Top Court Decision Allows Former N.S. Crown Lawyer To Sue Premier For Libel
    HALIFAX - The Supreme Court of Canada has opened the door to a libel lawsuit against Nova Scotia's premier by a former government lawyer who says the premier damaged his reputation by denouncing his courtroom arguments.    

    Top Court Decision Allows Former N.S. Crown Lawyer To Sue Premier For Libel