Medicine Hat News

Saskatchew­an government wants out of Broncos lawsuit

- BILL GRAVELAND

Lawyers for the Saskatchew­an government are to be in a Regina courtroom Wednesday to ask a judge to remove the province from a lawsuit filed by families of victims of the deadly Humboldt Broncos bus crash.

But lawyers for the hockey families argue the province should accept responsibi­lity for chronic inaction at the rural intersecti­on where the crash happened in April 2018.

Sixteen people were killed and 13 others were seriously injured when the junior hockey team’s bus was hit by a semi-trailer after the driver blew though a stop sign north of Tisdale, Sask. The inexperien­ced trucker, Jaskirat Singh Sidhu, was sentenced to eight years after pleading guilty to dangerous driving.

Among several lawsuits filed after the crash is one by the families of four players and an assistant coach who died. The families are suing Sidhu, the Calgary-based company that employed him, the bus company and the Saskatchew­an government.

In its court notice, the government asks to be struck from the lawsuit because the province has no-fault insurance. That means a person receives comprehens­ive benefits no matter who’s responsibl­e for a collision, but the right to sue for pain and suffering is limited.

“No person has any right of action respecting, arising out of or stemming from bodily injuries caused by a motor vehicle arising out of an accident,” reads the notice signed by deputy justice minister Michael Morris.

“Section 40.1 (of the Automobile Accident Insurance Act) extinguish­es any right of action which may have otherwise been available to the plaintiffs.”

Regina lawyers Sharon Fox and

Kevin Mellor represent the families of Adam Herold, 16, of Monmartre, Sask.; Jaxon Joseph, 20, of St. Albert, Alta.; Logan Hunter, 18, also of St. Albert; Jacob Leicht, 19, of Humboldt; and Mark Cross, 27, from Strasbourg, Sask.

“It’s an insult to the families,” Fox said in a phone interview. “I find it insulting that the government, rather than stepping up and doing the right thing, is continuall­y trying to get out from underneath the very problem that they caused.

“They were amply warned by people who have experience, people who are civil engineers, who are trained and know how to construct and maintain highways.”

Mellor said the intersecti­on at highways 35 and 335 was identified as being dangerous in 1997, after a family of six from Dawson Creek, B.C., including a five-week-old, died after their vehicle was hit by a semi-trailer.

“The trouble with the Saskatchew­an government is this really goes back to when the NDP government was in power and they just chose to do nothing about it,” he said.

Fox and Mellor said there were recommenda­tions from the RCMP, a coroner’s inquest, and local politician­s and engineers at the time who called for the intersecti­on to be changed.

The recommenda­tions included putting rumble strips on the highway, removing a large stand of trees that blocked sight lines and improving signage.

A large stop sign was added after the 1997 accident, the lawyers said. Rumble strips were added and the trees were cut back slightly following the Broncos crash.

“Our focus is the government of Saskatchew­an for the sight lines at that intersecti­on and their gross negligence in letting that intersecti­on go,” said Chris Joseph, whose son died.

“This will be a big day for us in court.”

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