Close X
Wednesday, December 4, 2024
ADVT 
National

This New Brunswick House Has Been Hit By Cars At Least Nine Times

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 10 Aug, 2016 01:07 PM
    FREDERICTON — Maureen Noble can't quite recall exactly how many cars have hit her house — she didn't start counting until about 25 years ago.
     
    "At least six since the early '90s that have hit the house and done serious damage," the New Brunswick retiree said Wednesday.
     
    "Three or four before that ... You kind of lose track after awhile."
     
    Her home sits on a sharp curve in Tracy, N.B., 40 kilometres south of Fredericton. It's currently undergoing repairs from a July 8 crash, when an out-of-control Ford came in sideways and went out the other side, taking shelves full of jars of pickles and jams with it.
     
    She is asking for the intervention, again, of the provincial Department of Transportation, which added "sharp turn" signs and lowered the speed limit to 30 kilometres per hour after a 2009 crash in which a car went into a storage area at the front of the house. It also bumped the living room window, under which her husband Terry was sleeping, although he was unhurt.
     
    That crash came after a 2007 incident in which a car carrying five people drove into the house, with one girl hospitalized with back injuries for several days. Two other times during the '90s, cars lost control in winter conditions and came into the house.
     
    "I just can't understand why — well, speeding basically is part of the reason," Noble mused. "I think people are just driving faster."
     
    Sarah Bustard, a spokeswoman for the provincial Transportation and Infrastructure Department, said Wednesday the government is aware of Noble's concerns and the matter is under review.
     
    The Nobles have lived in the house since 1971. The storage area was previously a post office, when Noble was the village's postmaster. After her retirement she has left that part of the building mostly unoccupied, in case history repeats itself again.
     
    "I'd love to go and read and sit there, but you just don't dare," she said. "It's getting scary."
     
    She said she has watched family members including four grandchildren playing in the same yard cars have careened through. The accidents seem to be escalating, she said, and she fears someone will get killed.
     
    She'd like the province to install a yellow flashing light, or a guardrail, or even rumble strips.
     
    "We have thought about moving, but in order to move we'd have to sell the house and do you think anybody's going to buy the house?"

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Protesters Gathers Outside Mount Polley Mine, Site Of Disaster 2 Years Ago

    On Aug. 4, 2014, a tailings storage facility burst at the mine, sending 24 million cubic metres of waste and water into nearby lakes and rivers.

    Protesters Gathers Outside Mount Polley Mine, Site Of Disaster 2 Years Ago

    Dangerous Offender Hearing Scheduled For Man Who Attacked Homeless Saskatchewan Woman

    PRINCE ALBERT, Sask. — A man who pleaded guilty to a brutal attack on a Saskatchewan homeless woman is to face a dangerous offender hearing next year.

    Dangerous Offender Hearing Scheduled For Man Who Attacked Homeless Saskatchewan Woman

    New Commander Promises To Fix Much-maligned Military Support Unit

    New Commander Promises To Fix Much-maligned Military Support Unit
    OTTAWA — The new head of the military's support unit for ill and injured military personnel is promising to address the many problems that have plagued the oft-criticized system for years.

    New Commander Promises To Fix Much-maligned Military Support Unit

    Telus Turns In Solid Q2 Results, Earnings Slightly Above Estimates

    VANCOUVER — Telus Corp. (TSX:T) says its net profit, adjusted earnings and revenue were up from the same time last year as it attracted more customers to its wireless division as well as its residential Internet and Optik TV services.

    Telus Turns In Solid Q2 Results, Earnings Slightly Above Estimates

    Newfoundland Man Charged After Plane Allegedly Taken On Joyride, Crashed Into Woods

    Newfoundland Man Charged After Plane Allegedly Taken On Joyride, Crashed Into Woods
    RCMP say the Cessna 180 was taken from the Jeffrey's area without the owner's consent.

    Newfoundland Man Charged After Plane Allegedly Taken On Joyride, Crashed Into Woods

    Prison Break Villain Plays Hero While Rescuing Injured Canada Goose In Vancouver

    Prison Break Villain Plays Hero While Rescuing Injured Canada Goose In Vancouver
    Robert Knepper was in Vancouver recently to shoot a revival of the Prison Break series that ran on FOX from 2005 to 2009. In a post on his Instagram page, the 57-year-old describes how he saved one of Vancouver's feathered inhabitants.

    Prison Break Villain Plays Hero While Rescuing Injured Canada Goose In Vancouver