Close X
Wednesday, December 4, 2024
ADVT 
National

Falling Ice From Metro Vancouver Bridges Damages At Least 40 Vehicles

The Canadian Press, 07 Dec, 2016 11:59 AM
    VANCOUVER — British Columbia's transportation minister says more needs to be done to prevent chunks of ice falling from Metro Vancouver's bridges and damaging vehicles.
     
    A winter storm brought more than five centimetres of snow to the region Monday and there were numerous reports of snow and ice falling from bridges, leaving vehicles with cracked windshields and dented roofs.
     
    "We're very thankful that no one was hurt during these incidents, but we're not happy at all that vehicles were damaged by falling snow and ice," said Transportation Minister Todd Stone.
     
     
    He said the Insurance Corporation of B.C. has received 40 claims from people whose vehicles were damaged. Ten of the claims came from drivers who were travelling over the Port Mann Bridge between Surrey and Coquitlam, and 30 from motorists going over the Alex Fraser Bridge, which spans New Westminster and Delta.
     
    Stone said the province will pay the insurance deductibles for all of the damaged vehicles, but it's too soon to say what the cost will be because more drivers could still come forward.
     
    Similar incidents were reported on the Port Mann Bridge in 2012, shortly after it opened. Devices were later installed on each of the bridge's 288 cables to drop down and clear snow and slush in wintry weather. They were in operation Monday.
     
     
    A de-icing spray was used to try and keep snow and ice off the towers and cross beam of the Alex Fraser Bridge, but staff are now investigating what else should have been done.
     
    "I want to say very clearly to the people of British Columbia that we can and we will do better," Stone said.
     
    Another snow storm is scheduled to hit the region Thursday. Stone said, among other things, monitoring is being increased on the bridges.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Trans Mountain Pipeline Approval Prompts Anger, Promises To Protest In B.C.

    Trans Mountain Pipeline Approval Prompts Anger, Promises To Protest In B.C.
    Vancouver Mayor Gregor Robertson said he was "profoundly disappointed," calling the decision a "big step backwards" for Canada's environment and economy.

    Trans Mountain Pipeline Approval Prompts Anger, Promises To Protest In B.C.

    South Asian Heritage Learning Tools Receive Boost From Province

    South Asian Heritage Learning Tools Receive Boost From Province
    Peter Fassbender, Minister of Community, Sport and Cultural Development, along with Amrik Virk, MLA for Surrey-Tynehead, addressed Surrey high school students and community members at Simon Fraser University.

    South Asian Heritage Learning Tools Receive Boost From Province

    PC Teen Sam Oosterhoff Sworn In As Youngest-Ever Member Of Ontario's Legislature

    PC Teen Sam Oosterhoff Sworn In As Youngest-Ever Member Of Ontario's Legislature
    A homeschooled teenager was sworn in Wednesday as the youngest-ever member of the Ontario legislature, but his socially conservative views threaten to make him the Progressive Conservatives' problem child.

    PC Teen Sam Oosterhoff Sworn In As Youngest-Ever Member Of Ontario's Legislature

    Foreign Ownership Of Condos Lower Than Year Ago In Big Cities, CMHC Report

    Foreign Ownership Of Condos Lower Than Year Ago In Big Cities, CMHC Report
    Foreign ownership was the highest in Vancouver and Toronto at 2.2 per cent and 2.3 per cent, respectively.

    Foreign Ownership Of Condos Lower Than Year Ago In Big Cities, CMHC Report

    Trial Begins For Montreal Activist Who Staged Topless Protest During Grand Prix

    Trial Begins For Montreal Activist Who Staged Topless Protest During Grand Prix
    MONTREAL — The lawyer for a Montreal woman who staged a topless protest at the city's Grand Prix festivities in 2015 is asking for a stay of proceedings against her client.

    Trial Begins For Montreal Activist Who Staged Topless Protest During Grand Prix

    Fentanyl Deaths On The Rise In Ontario: Coroner

    Fentanyl Deaths On The Rise In Ontario: Coroner
    TORONTO — Fentanyl deaths are on the rise in Ontario, though the province's chief coroner says numbers there aren't as bleak as elsewhere in the country.

    Fentanyl Deaths On The Rise In Ontario: Coroner