Close X
Monday, November 11, 2024
ADVT 
National

Family Calls For Road-safety Changes After Cyclist Dies In N.B. Training Crash

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 29 Dec, 2016 07:51 PM
    SAINT JOHN, N.B. — The death of competitive cyclist Ellen Watters highlights the need for safer roads in New Brunswick and beyond, her friend said Thursday ahead of a rally planned in her honour.
     
    Watters, 28, was badly injured after being hit by a vehicle while training Dec. 23 just outside Sussex, N.B. Her death was announced Wednesday.
     
    The Sunday rally will push New Brunswick to enact a one-metre rule for motorists, which is already legislated in other provinces including Nova Scotia and Ontario.
     
    Emily Flynn, Watters' friend and a fellow cyclist, said the group wants New Brunswick's rule to be named "Ellen's Law" in her memory.
     
    Flynn said the cycling community in New Brunswick has already been lobbying the government for legislation, and Watters will likely "be the catalyst that pushes it through."
     
    But Flynn said that's what Watters would have wanted.
     
    "She even said to her mother before that if she had to be the reason for roads to be safer for cyclists, she would be OK with that. Those are pretty big words," said Flynn in a phone interview Thursday.
     
     
    "Ellen always wanted to help others, and she always wanted to get more people out on bikes, and advocating for improved safety is part of that. She would always say, 'If you want to have a smile like mine, you just have to get on two wheels'."
     
    Watters, a kinesiology graduate originally from Apohaqui, N.B., had been rising up the ranks since joining the Ottawa-based The Cyclery Racing Program in 2014, and was poised to go professional next year.
     
    Earlier this year, Watters won the Tour of the Battenkill and Tour of Somerville in the U.S., and won bronze in the criterium at the Canadian Road Championships.
     
    She had signed with the U.S.-based Colavita-Bianchi team, and was to compete professionally next year, Cycling Canada said in a statement. She was also invited to be a part-time member of the Canadian women's development program.
     
    Flynn said Watters had a lust for life and a "big smile that would light up a room."
     
    "You would meet her for a second and she would have already left a lasting impacting," said Flynn. "She was just so warm and caring."
     
     
    The "One Metre For Ellen" rally will begin at 1 p.m. Sunday at 100 Prince Edward Street. People are encouraged to bike or walk from there to city hall at 15 Market Square.
     
    Under Ontario's law, motorists are required to keep a distance of one metre from cyclists, or receive a $110 fine and two demerit points.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    B.C. Offers Anglers Gift-card Reward For Help In Trout Research Project

    B.C. Offers Anglers Gift-card Reward For Help In Trout Research Project
    NANAIMO, B.C. — One hundred cutthroat trout on Comox Lake have been tagged as part of a B.C. government research project to assess the fish population's health.

    B.C. Offers Anglers Gift-card Reward For Help In Trout Research Project

    B.C.'s Economy To Grow In 2017, But Regional Divide Exists: Credit Union

    B.C.'s Economy To Grow In 2017, But Regional Divide Exists: Credit Union
    VANCOUVER — A B.C. credit union says Vancouver, Victoria and Kelowna will lead the province in economic growth next year  while other regions of the province will grow slowly.

    B.C.'s Economy To Grow In 2017, But Regional Divide Exists: Credit Union

    B.C. Offers Five-Year, Interest-Free Down-Payment Loans To First-Time Buyers

    B.C. Offers Five-Year, Interest-Free Down-Payment Loans To First-Time Buyers
    If you’re entering the market to buy your first home, the B.C. government is launching a new program to partner with you on the down payment for your mortgage, Premier Christy Clark announced today.

    B.C. Offers Five-Year, Interest-Free Down-Payment Loans To First-Time Buyers

    Abbotsford, B.C. Man Who Tried To Smuggle Baby Lizards Across Border Fined $6,000

    Abbotsford, B.C. Man Who Tried To Smuggle Baby Lizards Across Border Fined $6,000
    Canada Border Services Agency says in a release that Gregory Anderson was trying to cross from Sumas, Wash., into Abbotsford last October when officers found the reptiles in the pocket of his hooded sweatshirt.

    Abbotsford, B.C. Man Who Tried To Smuggle Baby Lizards Across Border Fined $6,000

    Toddler, 2, Among 4 Family Members Killed In Port Colborne, Ont. House Fire

    Toddler, 2, Among 4 Family Members Killed In Port Colborne, Ont. House Fire
    Two children, their mother and their great-grandmother have died in a house fire that has devastated a small southwestern Ontario community, according to a close friend and a family relative.

    Toddler, 2, Among 4 Family Members Killed In Port Colborne, Ont. House Fire

    Conditional Discharge For Unruly Sunwing Travellers Who Forced Plane Turnaround

    TORONTO — Two women whose "obnoxious and unruly behaviour" forced a Cuba-bound Sunwing flight to return to Toronto under a military escort have been given a conditional discharge and ordered to pay a fine.

    Conditional Discharge For Unruly Sunwing Travellers Who Forced Plane Turnaround