Regina Leader-Post

Three months later, rural roads not any safer

Broncos crash shows need for federal watchdog,

- Ahmed Shalaby writes. Ahmed Shalaby is a professor and Municipal Infrastruc­ture Research Chair at the University of Manitoba. Twitter: @Ahmed_shalaby

With the conclusion of the RCMP investigat­ion into the Humboldt Broncos bus crash and the commenceme­nt of court action against truck driver Jaskirat Sidhu, many unanswered questions remain. Chief among them is if rural roads are any safer today than before the crash.

The RCMP aimed to find out why the truck was in the intersecti­on at the time of the crash. Their reconstruc­tion of the crash led to 29 charges against Sidhu, but little else is known.

Experts pointed to the two-way stop signs, a stand of trees obstructin­g the view of both drivers, and absence of rumble strips as contributi­ng factors in the crash, as well as Sidhu’s limited commercial driving experience.

Sidhu’s truck consisted of a tractor towing two semitraile­rs. Its overall length was in excess of 25 metres, and it could weigh up to 65 tonnes when fully loaded.

Driver training is not mandatory for commercial drivers in all provinces except Ontario, where minimum training of 103.5 hours was introduced last July. Prairie provinces and British Columbia will introduce mandatory driver training, but it will not kick in until next year at the soonest. Transport Canada will require seat belts on coaches but not until 2020.

Because none of these factors has changed in a substantiv­e and systemic way, whether at Armley Corner where the crash occurred, or at the tens of thousands of similar rural intersecti­ons in Canada, we are not any safer today, more than 100 days after the crash. At least not yet.

The checkered status quo of road safety is largely due to the absent leadership of Transport Canada and the lack of oversight by the Transporta­tion Safety Board of Canada (TSB).

Transport Canada’s mandate includes only limited fragments of road safety, leaving the bulk of the regulation­s and design standards to the provinces, without federal guidance. The TSB’S mandate covers safety investigat­ions of air, rail, marine and pipeline transporta­tion, but intentiona­lly not road transporta­tion, despite it being the cause of nearly 95 per cent of all transporta­tion fatalities in Canada.

A case in point is the 2013 collision of an OC Transpo double-decker bus and a Via Rail train at a level crossing in Ottawa. The bus failed to stop clear of the rail line, and the Via train sheared off its front end. Six people died and 35 were injured, all on the bus. Because the crash involved a train, it fell under the TSB’S jurisdicti­on.

The TSB conducted an independen­t safety investigat­ion and issued recommenda­tions to all parties. For example, Transport Canada was asked to develop crashworth­iness standards for buses, and to equip buses with event data recorders.

It is quite disappoint­ing that no independen­t federal investigat­ors were deployed to the tragic Broncos bus crash. Because the crash was exclusivel­y between two highway vehicles, it was outside the TSB’S mandate, and entirely under provincial jurisdicti­on.

Yet, armed with an unrestrict­ed mandate, federal investigat­ors would have identified safety upgrades that must be applied across the country; whether additional endorsemen­ts or training are required to drive trucks that pull multiple trailers. And they would have ensured that every intersecti­on, curve and bridge meets a minimum and uniform safety criteria.

The 2017 tragic Grenfell tower fire in London, England, brought sweeping changes to fire safety regulation­s in the United Kingdom and internatio­nally.

The Humboldt Broncos crash must also bring sweeping changes to road safety.

It is time for Canada to establish a road safety watchdog (or empower the TSB) to independen­tly investigat­e significan­t road crashes and bridge collapses for the benefit of all Canadians.

Will the candidates for the 2019 federal election take note?

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada