Close X
Sunday, December 1, 2024
ADVT 
National

Two Teenage Girls Struck, Killed By Train In Small Nova Scotia Community

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 10 Jun, 2016 11:50 AM
    LANTZ, N.S. — Two teenage girls were killed by a train early this morning in a rural community outside Halifax.
     
    RCMP say they were called to an intersection at Mader Street and Highway 2 in Lantz, N.S., around 1:40 a.m. after someone on the train called 911.
     
    They say a 17-year-old from Lantz and an 18-year-old former international exchange student from Germany were pronounced dead at the scene of the collision.
     
    Cpl. Jennifer Clarke said the CN freight train was heading south to Halifax when it hit the young women, who were not at a crossing.
     
    Jim Feeny, CN's director of public affairs, said two crew members were not able to stop the train in time, and have been offered stress counselling.
     
    "Initial reports are that the crew followed proper procedures, sounding the train horn and applying the emergency brakes, but it was impossible to stop the train in time to prevent this tragedy," Feeny said in a statement. 
     
    Debbie Buott-Matheson, a spokeswoman for the Chignecto-Central Regional School Board, says the young woman from Lantz was a student at Hants East Rural High School.
     
    She says grief counsellors and psychologists were at the school today to help students and staff.
     
    Denise Bellefontaine, manager of a café at the nearby East Hants Sportsplex, said she came upon the scene as she drove to work at 8:30 a.m. Friday.
     
    "I came to the train tracks and the lights were flashing. I saw the train was stopped. I didn't know anything had happened," said Bellefontaine.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    A Look At The Cost Of Syrian Refugee Resettlement, By The Numbers

    A Look At The Cost Of Syrian Refugee Resettlement, By The Numbers
    Here's a look at the original budget for the program, and what was spent in 2015-2016, by the numbers:

    A Look At The Cost Of Syrian Refugee Resettlement, By The Numbers

    Owning A Home Increasingly A Pipe Dream For House-hunters In Toronto, Vancouver

    Owning A Home Increasingly A Pipe Dream For House-hunters In Toronto, Vancouver
    Unlike many house sales in Toronto, she added, her house "didn't go for a crazy amount over the asking price."

    Owning A Home Increasingly A Pipe Dream For House-hunters In Toronto, Vancouver

    Montreal Woman, 55, Killed In Apparent Dog Attack

    Montreal Woman, 55, Killed In Apparent Dog Attack
    Farid Benzenati said he arrived home from work at around 5 p.m. and noticed a dog playing with what he thought was "a large object" in the next backyard.

    Montreal Woman, 55, Killed In Apparent Dog Attack

    B.C. Premier Sheds Personal Silence To Help Fight Sexual Violence

    B.C. Premier Sheds Personal Silence To Help Fight Sexual Violence
    Clark says she has always wondered if, due to her silence, the man kept going until he caught a girl who could not get away.

    B.C. Premier Sheds Personal Silence To Help Fight Sexual Violence

    New Interchange At Highway 91 And 72nd To 'Cut The Congestion' At Alex Fraser Bridge

    New Interchange At Highway 91 And 72nd To 'Cut The Congestion' At Alex Fraser Bridge
    Traffic demand on the Highway 91 corridor – and over the Alex Fraser Bridge – continues to grow as development in Surrey and Delta increases

    New Interchange At Highway 91 And 72nd To 'Cut The Congestion' At Alex Fraser Bridge

    Saskatchewan Moves To Extend Compassionate Leave For People Caring For Loved Ones

    Saskatchewan Moves To Extend Compassionate Leave For People Caring For Loved Ones
    REGINA — The Saskatchewan government has tabled legislation that will allow people to take more time off work to care for a dying or very sick loved one.

    Saskatchewan Moves To Extend Compassionate Leave For People Caring For Loved Ones