National Post (National Edition)

MPs honour Humboldt’s victims

- The Canadian Press, with files from Dave Deibert, Postmedia News Postmedia News

teams and leagues delivered teary-eyed tributes ahead of the daily question period — the first since the April 6 crash that claimed 16 lives aboard the team bus.

Conservati­ve MP Dane Lloyd paid tribute to players Conner Lukan and Parker Tobin, both of whom grew up in his Alberta riding of Sturgeon River-Parkland and died in the crash.

Conservati­ve MP Karen Vecchio said countless Canadians know what it’s like to send kids on a bus for camp, school or a sports tournament. Liberal MP Rodger Cuzner, a former coach and hockey father, said he never recalled thinking, “I hope they all make it back” as the bus left the rink. Todd Doherty, a Conservati­ve from B.C., said of the crash: “We are all numb.”

Even during question period, partisan sniping took a back seat when Public Safety Minister Ralph Goodale praised the “demonstrat­ion of solidarity” in the House for his home province of Saskatchew­an.

Conservati­ve Leader Andrew Scheer, who also represents a Saskatchew­an riding, added his appreciati­on for the “non-partisan sentiments that have brought us all together in tribute to victims of the crash.”

Sixteen members of the Humboldt Broncos team have died since their team bus crashed with a semitruck at a rural Saskatchew­an intersecti­on just over a week ago.

NDP MP Erin Weir said the young people killed in the crash were not just great hockey players, but were also pillars of the community.

“They embodied a spirit of public service that inspires all Canadians and that we should strive to emulate here in this Parliament,” said Weir, who also represents a Saskatchew­an riding.

In Saskatoon, a memorial was held Monday for 18-yearold Evan Thomas. Mini hockey sticks were handed out to people as they entered SaskTel Centre. They raised their sticks in the air as Evan’s family walked into the arena.

Hockey Night in Canada personalit­y Ron MacLean spoke in a video tribute, describing his trip back from Humboldt to Saskatoon after the accident. He looked up and saw a stunning bright star in the otherwise dark sky. That bright light, MacLean says, was Evan Thomas.

“It was an incredible sight in that evening sky, that beautiful evening sky.”

Mourners heard that Thomas, nicknamed E.T., wanted a career in medicine and was a good student, winning a top science award in Grade 11.

Evan Thomas’s father, Scott, said it’s not possible to understand how such a catastroph­e could happen.

“You cannot make sense of this tragedy, so please stop trying. I have stopped trying,” he said, choking back tears.

“The why is unanswerab­le.” Jacques Ramsay, citing the tests conducted on the boy after the injection and eliminatin­g any other procedural or equipment failure, concluded that the child had been inadverten­tly injected with potassium rather than saline, causing him to go into cardiac arrest.

Ramsay makes it clear in his report that there is no evidence the death was the result of anything other than an accident.

In his recommenda­tions, Ramsay noted that Ste-Justine Hospital had already undertaken measures to ensure such an the incident is not repeated and that he expected the results of those changes to be transmitte­d to the coroner’s office.

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