Close X
Thursday, September 19, 2024
ADVT 
National

Independent Tests To Find Cause Of Nipigon Bridge Failure To Start Monday

Darpan News Desk IANS, 15 Jan, 2016 12:49 PM
    TORONTO — Two independent testing facilities have been hired to find out what led to the failure of the Nipigon River Bridge in northern Ontario last Sunday.
     
    The National Research Council of Canada and Surface Science Western at Western University will start tests Monday to determine what caused the bolts holding the bridge cables to fail, allowing the decking to rise about 60 centimetres.
     
    The bridge, part of the Trans-Canada highway, was closed for about 24 hours, severing the only east-west link for trucks that move about $100 million worth of goods daily.
     
    Ministry of Transportation staff used more than 100 large cement blocks as counterweights to lower the bridge surface so they could reopen one lane of traffic, but oversized trucks must still detour through the United States.
     
    Premier Kathleen Wynne said earlier this week that it was too early to start blaming anyone for the problems with Nipigon Bridge and urged people to "take a breath" while engineers determine exactly what went wrong.
     
    The $106-million Nipigon River Bridge, the first every cable-stayed bridge in Ontario, opened the first two lanes about two months ago, but the four-lane project isn't scheduled to be completed until next year.
     
    Wynne vowed the province will get to the bottom of what happened, fix it, and make sure it doesn't happen again.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Thousands Flagged For Scrutiny By Canada's New Air Passenger Screening System

    Thousands Flagged For Scrutiny By Canada's New Air Passenger Screening System
    The Canada Border Services Agency says the travellers — flagged for possible links to terrorism or serious crime — represented a tiny fraction of the millions who flew into the country.

    Thousands Flagged For Scrutiny By Canada's New Air Passenger Screening System

    B.C. Commits To Public Reports On Teens Placed In Hotels After Joint Review

    "I can't commit to that today," Stephanie Cadieux said Wednesday. "I don't think that would be reasonable."

    B.C. Commits To Public Reports On Teens Placed In Hotels After Joint Review

    Vancouver Inquest Calls For Video Cameras, More First Aid Training For Police

    Vancouver Inquest Calls For Video Cameras, More First Aid Training For Police
    A coroner's jury examining the death of a 58-year old woman in Vancouver more than a year ago is recommending more training for police.

    Vancouver Inquest Calls For Video Cameras, More First Aid Training For Police

    Beloved Victorian-Era Lounge To Close At Victoria's Empress Hotel

    Beloved Victorian-Era Lounge To Close At Victoria's Empress Hotel
    For more than a century, the Bengal Lounge at the Fairmont Empress Hotel in Victoria has paid homage to the days when the sun never set on the British Empire.

    Beloved Victorian-Era Lounge To Close At Victoria's Empress Hotel

    Police Breached Cellphone Customers' Charter Rights, Ontario Judge Rules

    Police Breached Cellphone Customers' Charter Rights, Ontario Judge Rules
    Telus and Rogers brought the Charter of Rights challenge before the court in 2014 after police asked the companies for customer cellphone information as part of an investigation into the robberies of several jewellery stores.

    Police Breached Cellphone Customers' Charter Rights, Ontario Judge Rules

    Hospital Layoffs Will Hurt Patients, Warn Ontario Nurses Associations

    Hospital Layoffs Will Hurt Patients, Warn Ontario Nurses Associations
    The Ontario Nurses Association is sounding the alarm about layoffs off Registered Nurses by cash-strapped hospitals, and warns patients will pay the price.

    Hospital Layoffs Will Hurt Patients, Warn Ontario Nurses Associations