National Post

Trucking company owner charged in Broncos bus crash

Seven federal, one provincial charge laid

- COLETTE DERWORIZ

EDMONTON • The owner of an Alberta trucking company involved in the fatal Humboldt Broncos bus crash has been charged.

Alberta Transporta­tion Minister Brian Mason said Wednesday that Sukhmander Singh of Adesh Deol Trucking faces charges of non-compliance with various federal and provincial safety regulation­s.

“The charges follow an investigat­ion that was completed by Alberta Transporta­tion into the collision,” Mason said. “The investigat­ion found multiple instances of non-compliance of various transporta­tion regulatory requiremen­ts in a sixmonth period.”

Sixteen people were killed and 13 were injured in rural Saskatchew­an six months ago when the Humboldt Broncos team bus was involved in a crash with a semi-truck owned by the Calgary-based company.

Jaskirat Singh Sidhu, who was driving the semi-truck, was charged earlier this year with dangerous driving causing death and dangerous driving causing bodily harm.

Officials with Alberta Transporta­tion said eight charges have been laid against the trucking company owner.

They include seven federal charges: two counts of failing to maintain logs for drivers’ hours of service, three counts of failing to monitor the compliance of a driver under safety regulation­s, and two counts of having more than one daily log for any day. The eighth charge under provincial regulation­s alleges failure to have or follow a written safety program.

When reached in Calgary, Singh said he didn’t have any comment.

A department spokesman said a federal Crown lawyer will be handling the prosecutio­n on the charges against the owner.

Singh’s first court appearance is Nov. 9 in Calgary.

The maximum penalty for a federal hours of service failing is $5,000 per offence, while the provincial charge carries a $310 penalty. A court can, however, use discretion to impose a penalty up to $2,000.

Alberta Transporta­tion said Adesh Deol Trucking remains suspended.

Myles Shumlanski, whose son Nick was injured in the crash, was pleased to hear about the charges.

“It’s a good start,” he said. “Some of the people who did the charging need to look at that, too, because why did it get to that point? It’s still happening.”

Shumlanski said government­s across the country need to look at why licences are being handed out so easily.

Mason, citing the Broncos crash as the reason, said the province is making driver training for new commercial truckers and bus drivers mandatory,

“That incident prompted jurisdicti­ons across Canada to take a closer look at their safety practices,” he said. “Alberta Transporta­tion was already in the process of considerin­g several improvemen­ts to traffic safety in our province.”

The province said the training, which will include a standardiz­ed curriculum, will be mandatory as of March 1.

“New requiremen­ts for trucking companies based in Alberta will enhance safety on the roads right across the continent,” Mason said.

He said the province will eliminate a temporary safety fitness certificat­e and require all new commercial carriers to prove compliance with transporta­tion safety regulation­s before they start operating. They will also be required to renew it every three years.

Earlier this month, Alberta also announced it will ditch its privatized model for road testing and will administer road exams directly to new drivers.

Officials said testers will be government employees, and there will be more oversight to ensure road exams are conducted fairly and consistent­ly.

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Sukhmander Singh

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