Close X
Wednesday, September 25, 2024
ADVT 
National

Investigation Demanded In Death Of British Woman Hit On B.C. Ski Hill

The Canadian Press, 27 Feb, 2016 12:10 PM
    CALGARY — Friends and family of a British woman who died in a Calgary hospital after a collision with a snowboarder at Kicking Horse Mountain Resort say the RCMP should be conducting a criminal investigation into her death.
     
    Anne Woods, 55, of Crawley, West Sussex, England, was near the end of a three-week vacation in Canada when she went skiing at the resort near Golden, B.C., earlier this month.
     
    She was with a group of eight people, including her husband, Terry, and had reached the end of a green run and entered a ski slow zone when she collided with a 26-year-old snowboarder visiting from Mexico.
     
    Family spokesman Shaun Moloney says they want the resort’s safety practices reviewed and the RCMP to investigate.
     
    The initial RCMP investigation into the crash found no evidence of a crime and the case was closed.
     
    Investigators did not interview or collect a witness statement from Terry Woods and the snowboarder has reportedly returned to Mexico.
     
    Moloney said Terry Woods saw someone coming very fast "in a blur across his vision" moments before his wife was struck.
     
    “Her body was flung forward and the force of that caused both her shoulder blades to be broken and for her spinal cord to snap,” said Moloney of the medical assessment of Anne Woods’ injuries.
     
     
    She was airlifted to hospital in Calgary. Her life support was removed two days later and she succumbed to her injuries.
     
    The snowboarder is reported to have told resort officials and police that he was travelling at a moderate speed and did not see Anne Woods as he had crested a ridge.
     
    Moloney said that explanation contradicts the evidence.
     
    “We believe he was going fast and did jump,” said Moloney. “How do you explain the medical evidence and degree of injuries that indicate high speed?
     
    “We were astounded to be told there was no criminal matter to be investigated. (The police) statement to us was once you’ve bought the ticket then you’ve implicitly accepted the inherent risk associated with skiing and therefore, if you’re injured or, in this case, killed when undertaking the activity, you have no recourse for criminal law.”
     
    Matt Mosteller of Resorts of the Canadian Rockies issued a statement outlining Kicking Horse Mountain Resort’s commitment to safety.
     
    “We have a significant protocol that our team follows specifically around creating a safe skiing and riding environment,” said Mosteller. “From signage when you arrive, at the ticket window before you even board a lift, and then once on the mountain. There is an array of highly visual signage to alert guests and remind guests.”

    MORE National ARTICLES

    No End In Sight For 'Spike Unit' Helping Social Security Tribunal

    No End In Sight For 'Spike Unit' Helping Social Security Tribunal
    The so-called spike unit was set up in the fall of 2014 to triage the cases that began piling up after the Conservative government launched the Social Security Tribunal of Canada in April 2013.

    No End In Sight For 'Spike Unit' Helping Social Security Tribunal

    Arctic Council support sought by environmental groups for heavy fuel oil ban

    Arctic Council support sought by environmental groups for heavy fuel oil ban
    Environmental groups want the eight countries that ring the North Pole to take a stand on banning the use of heavy fuel oil, considered one of the greatest threats to the Arctic ecosystem.

    Arctic Council support sought by environmental groups for heavy fuel oil ban

    Man Found Dead In Vancouver Apartment First Murder Of 2016: Police

    Man Found Dead In Vancouver Apartment First Murder Of 2016: Police
    Const. Brian Montague says in a release a body was discovered in an apartment Saturday night (on Granville Street near Broadway).

    Man Found Dead In Vancouver Apartment First Murder Of 2016: Police

    Indo-Canadian Sikh Amrik Singh Ahluwalia Elected Head Of Ontario's Peel Police Services Board

    Indo-Canadian Sikh Amrik Singh Ahluwalia Elected Head Of Ontario's Peel Police Services Board
    After Navdeep Singh Bains and Harjit Singh Sajjan who became the first Sikh Cabinet ministers in Canada, Ahluwalia is the third Indo-Canadian to rise in the country's government affairs

    Indo-Canadian Sikh Amrik Singh Ahluwalia Elected Head Of Ontario's Peel Police Services Board

    3 Dead After Separate Snowmobile Crashes In Ontario

    3 Dead After Separate Snowmobile Crashes In Ontario
    Police in Georgian Bay Township say they received a report of a single-vehicle collision in an isolated spot on Go Home Lake early Saturday.

    3 Dead After Separate Snowmobile Crashes In Ontario

    Rescue Crews Searching For Missing Snowboarder On Cypress Mountain

    Rescue Crews Searching For Missing Snowboarder On Cypress Mountain
    Team leader Mike Danks says the Surrey man was supposed to be back by 2:30 p.m. Friday.

    Rescue Crews Searching For Missing Snowboarder On Cypress Mountain