A highway east of Vancouver has reopened following a deadly crash that killed one person, seriously hurt five others and left 34 more with non-life-threatening injuries.
- Police say a crash that killed one person and injured dozens more east of Vancouver on Wednesday began with a report of a semi-truck stopped in the S-curves on a mountainous highway in "treacherous" road conditions.
The RCMP say by the time an officer arrived, a pickup truck had collided with the stopped tractor-trailer, which resulted in "a cascading, chain-reaction collision" involving at least two dozen vehicles including a bus.
Police say the driver of the pickup, a man in his 40s from the south Okanagan, died along with his dog.
Five people were seriously hurt but the RCMP say only one person remains in hospital with broken bones, while 34 others have less serious injuries.
The Mounties say road conditions caught many drivers by surprise.
DriveBC, the provincial government's online site for traveller information, says the Coquihalla Highway near Hope, about 160 kilometres east of Vancouver, reopened at around 10 p.m. Wednesday night, 12 hours after the collision.
CLEAR - #BCHwy5 is FULLY OPEN and CLEAR northbound, north of #HopeBC from earlier multi-vehicle incident. #Coquihalla
— DriveBC (@DriveBC) February 11, 2021
Crews had to remove more than 20 damaged vehicles, including jackknifed tractor-trailers, a motor coach bus, cars, a police cruiser and even an ambulance that lost control in icy conditions on a curvy, downhill grade.
More than 30 people were taken to a nearby warming station in Hope, and police say about 50 people were involved in the accident.
In a news release on Thursday, Cpl. Mike Halskov of B.C. RCMP Traffic Services said the officer who first approached the stopped truck in the northbound lanes of the highway collided with a concrete barrier when taking "evasive action" because of the road conditions. The police car was then hit from behind by a jackknifed tractor-trailer that couldn't stop, injuring the officer, Halskov said.
Road and weather conditions at the time "contributed significantly" to the crash.
"Speed relative to conditions also played a factor," he said.
"In this collision, slower speeds may not have prevented collisions due to the highway being glare ice, but slower speeds may have reduced injury." Halskov said a number of rescue vehicles including an ambulance were involved in minor crashes when they arrived.
He said no criminal charges are anticipated in the RCMP's ongoing investigation of the crash.
B.C. is experiencing a cold snap that has prompted extreme cold or arctic outflow warnings for many parts of the province and Environment Canada says temperatures at the crash site felt close to -20 with the wind chill.