Close X
Wednesday, November 27, 2024
ADVT 
National

Cites Humboldt Crash: Alberta Making Driver Training For New Truckers Mandatory

The Canadian Press, 11 Jul, 2018 11:58 AM
    CALGARY — Alberta is making driver training for new commercial truckers mandatory as early as January 2019, citing the recent horrific Humboldt bus crash as the impetus to get it done as soon as possible.
     
     
    "The matters that we are working on today were things that we were working on at that time," Transportation Minister Brian Mason told a news conference Tuesday.
     
     
    "But clearly the terrible tragedy has focused everyone on the need to do even more to make sure that our highways and our trucking system are as safe as possible."
     
     
    Sixteen people, including members of the Humboldt Broncos junior hockey team, were killed in rural Saskatchewan three months ago when their bus was involved in a crash with a semi-truck owned by a Calgary-based shipper. Another 13 were injured.
     
     
    The driver of the semi-truck, Jaskirat Sidhu, faces 29 criminal charges including 16 counts of dangerous driving causing death.
     
     
    Mason said the rules of the program will be hashed out with Albertans and industry representatives in the coming months to make sure that the changes don't needlessly restrict business while keeping the roads safe.
     
     
    Mason said other rules will be tightened or tossed out.
     
     
    He said the province is doing away with an effective 60-day grace period that allows commercial carriers to operate while still working to get their safety fitness certificates.
     
     
     
     
    "We are going to remove that temporary (60-day) certificate," said Mason.
     
     
    "It will require all new carriers to prove their compliance with safety standards before they start operations in Alberta."
     
     
    Mason said the province also plans to have new carriers take a mandatory course on the provincial rules and laws governing their operations.
     
     
    The province is also considering a mandatory compliance review for new carriers within nine months to a year from the day they open their doors. Those reviews would then take place at regular intervals after that.
     
     
    Mason said the regular reviews would stop so-called "chameleon" carriers that get decertified for failing to meet safety standards only to set up shop and continue operating under a new name.
     
     
    Chris Nash, president of the Alberta Motor Transport Association, said the industry welcomes the changes.
     
     
    "We believe minimum standard training is required for both new and existing commercial drivers and carriers to operate on Alberta's roadways," said Nash.
     
     
    Sidhu had been driving for Adesh Deol Trucking Ltd., at the time of the crash.
     
     
    The owner of the company has said Sidhu began working for him a month earlier and had the proper credentials to operate the truck. The company's other truck has since been ordered off the road.
     
     
    Mason declined to say how, if at all, the new proposed changes would have affected Adesh Deol Trucking or its safety accreditation.
     
     
    Once implemented, Alberta would become the second province, after Ontario, to mandate truck driver training.
     
     
    Ontario's program consists of 103.5 hours of mandatory training, and drivers there must also show they can handle a loaded truck on major highways.
     
     
    Saskatchewan is also eyeing changes to trucker accreditation.
     
     
    The government is overhauling the road test model for all licence classes after a report found high and varying fees for the tests along with questions about the fairness of the examinations and the competence and conduct of those doing the testing.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    BC Premier John Horgan Says ‘Gouging' To Blame For Higher Gas Prices, Not Taxes

    BC Premier John Horgan Says ‘Gouging' To Blame For Higher Gas Prices, Not Taxes
    Premier John Horgan says price gouging, not higher taxes, is responsible for skyrocketing gasoline prices in British Columbia.

    BC Premier John Horgan Says ‘Gouging' To Blame For Higher Gas Prices, Not Taxes

    OPP Rescue Child Locked In Hot Car In Temiskaming Shores, Ont.; Woman Charged

    OPP Rescue Child Locked In Hot Car In Temiskaming Shores, Ont.; Woman Charged
    Police say they received a call Wednesday afternoon reporting a small child locked in a vehicle in Temiskaming Shores, Ont.

    OPP Rescue Child Locked In Hot Car In Temiskaming Shores, Ont.; Woman Charged

    Retaliate Or Not? Canada's Tough Decision In The Event Of U.S. Tariffs

    Retaliate Or Not? Canada's Tough Decision In The Event Of U.S. Tariffs
    Industry leaders say the federal Liberal government will face a complex decision — with deep economic consequences — if the U.S. makes good on its threat to slap tariffs on Canadian-made cars and trucks.

    Retaliate Or Not? Canada's Tough Decision In The Event Of U.S. Tariffs

    Lions Player Jovan Olafioye Takes To Twitter For Help Navigating Vancouver's Housing Market

    Lions Player Jovan Olafioye Takes To Twitter For Help Navigating Vancouver's Housing Market
    Jovan Olafioye has made a career out of protecting CFL quarterbacks from some of the league's most fearsome pass-rushers, but this season, he felt like he was in danger of being sacked by Vancouver's notoriously tough housing market.

    Lions Player Jovan Olafioye Takes To Twitter For Help Navigating Vancouver's Housing Market

    Police Search For South Asian Driver Who Struck Mountie, Breaking His Arm In Burnaby

    RCMP say a Mountie suffered a broken arm while attempting to stop a driver who was allegedly using an electronic device behind the wheel in Burnaby, B.C.

    Police Search For South Asian Driver Who Struck Mountie, Breaking His Arm In Burnaby

    Victims Of Humboldt Broncos Crash May Soon Get Interim Payments

    Victims Of Humboldt Broncos Crash May Soon Get Interim Payments
    SASKATOON — The victims of the Humboldt Broncos hockey team bus crash may soon get interim payments from a fundraising campaign that has collected $15.2 million.

    Victims Of Humboldt Broncos Crash May Soon Get Interim Payments