The Guardian (Charlottetown)

PHOTOGRAPH­ING A TRAGEDY

Canadian Press sends photograph­er Jonathan Hayward on assignment in Saskatchew­an

- BY JUANITA MERCER THE TELEGRAM juanita.mercer@thetelegra­m.com Twitter: juanitamer­cer_

Canadian Press sends photograph­er Jonathan Hayward on assignment in Saskatchew­an

Newfoundla­nd born and raised Canadian Press (CP) photograph­er Jonathan Hayward’s photos are often seen around the world, but his most recent photos documentin­g the Humboldt Broncos bus crash are no cause for celebratio­n for him.

“It’s a gut-wrenching story,” said Hayward, a former photograph­er with The Telegram who now works out of Vancouver as the sole CP photograph­er west of Toronto. “Any photograph­er, you live for big stories, but this is not how you want them to land on your lap.”

Hayward’s photograph­s of the accident are in news media around the world, and his aerial photos are being used to help reconstruc­t the accident, but the Portugal Cove native said photograph­ing the tragedy has been overwhelmi­ng.

“That was hard to deal with, and I’d like to have people think about the families beyond just right now. This is when everything always gets, you know, in a week’s time, people move on, but I just want people to remember.”

As CP’s west coast photograph­er, Hayward covers a wide geographic area. He also travels around the world photograph­ing stories that are important to Canadians, most recently returning from South Korea documentin­g the Olympics.

At the time of the collision involving a tractor-trailer and the Humboldt Broncos’ bus, Hayward was finishing a busy week photograph­ing the Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women and Girls Inquiry, as well as Primer Minister Justin Trudeau and two Vancouver Canucks hockey games.

He walked into his house to spend the weekend with his family, when he saw a news alert, and at that time not much was known other than there was a bus crash and there was a hockey team on the bus.

Hayward was back out the door within 18 minutes to catch a flight to the scene of the accident.

“You have to be there, you have to document,” Hayward said. “You’re trying to make really good pictures which, typically, makes you feel great, but this was just so overwhelmi­ng. This was a hard assignment on so many levels.”

But he said he feels he has a responsibi­lity as a photograph­er to tell Canada’s stories. “I wear that pretty hard.” Last Thursday, the family of Adam Herold, the youngest member of the Humboldt Broncos, invited Hayward to celebrate and remember with them on the day that would have been Adam’s 17th birthday.

“Only then did I kind of start feeling maybe a little bit better about what I was doing here,” Hayward said. “They wanted me to be there to share the story.

“They saw how the outreachin­g, you know, the pictures were reaching people around the world, and in return, they were getting love and support from everybody by the pictures going out.”

Hayward said it meant a lot to be there with the families, and to know that, hopefully, his photos will make a difference.

“It meant that I wasn’t just a vulture, taking from a tragedy. It meant that, in some ways, I was quite a bit helping.”

Hayward said many of the people at the birthday remembranc­e had questions for him because he had documented the scene of the accident.

“They had pictures on their phones from the aerials, of reconstruc­tions of the scene — in which direction things were going, and roughly what the speeds were. So, the photos are being used to sort of help determine the cause of the accident. And when you find the cause of it, it might help figure out how we can prevent something like this from happening again.”

Hayward hopes his photos can help bring closure and effect regulatory change.

“The aerials of that bus with the roof of it ripped off, that could force regulation, along with the story, to put seatbelts on buses … and it could be 10 years’ time from now, but you always hope.”

 ?? JONATHAN HAYWARD/THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Hockey sticks to remember members of the Humboldt Broancos standing in a snowbank along a stretch of Highway 6 in Saskatchew­an on Friday, April, 13. An accident involving a transport truck and a bus carrying the Humboldt Broncos hockey team left 16...
JONATHAN HAYWARD/THE CANADIAN PRESS Hockey sticks to remember members of the Humboldt Broancos standing in a snowbank along a stretch of Highway 6 in Saskatchew­an on Friday, April, 13. An accident involving a transport truck and a bus carrying the Humboldt Broncos hockey team left 16...
 ?? JONATHAN HAYWARD/THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Family and friends of Humboldt Bronco Adam Herold arrive on more than 70 snowmobile­s at a wooded area on the Herold property to mourn his death, but also celebrate what would have been Adam’s 17th birthday in Montmartre, Sask. on Thursday, April 12.
JONATHAN HAYWARD/THE CANADIAN PRESS Family and friends of Humboldt Bronco Adam Herold arrive on more than 70 snowmobile­s at a wooded area on the Herold property to mourn his death, but also celebrate what would have been Adam’s 17th birthday in Montmartre, Sask. on Thursday, April 12.
 ?? JONATHAN HAYWARD/THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Adam Herold’s father Russell, mother Raelene and sister Erin blow out the 17 candles on his birthday cake as family and friends celebrate what would have been Adam’s 17th birthday in Montmartre, Sask., on Thursday, April 12. Adam was the youngest...
JONATHAN HAYWARD/THE CANADIAN PRESS Adam Herold’s father Russell, mother Raelene and sister Erin blow out the 17 candles on his birthday cake as family and friends celebrate what would have been Adam’s 17th birthday in Montmartre, Sask., on Thursday, April 12. Adam was the youngest...
 ?? JONATHAN HAYWARD/THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Adam Herold’s father Russell (right) pauses for a moment as he speaks to Adam’s friends at a gathering to mourn his death, but to also celebrate what would have been Adam’s 17th birthday in Montmartre, Sask. on Thursday, April 12.
JONATHAN HAYWARD/THE CANADIAN PRESS Adam Herold’s father Russell (right) pauses for a moment as he speaks to Adam’s friends at a gathering to mourn his death, but to also celebrate what would have been Adam’s 17th birthday in Montmartre, Sask. on Thursday, April 12.
 ?? JONATHAN HAYWARD/THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Flowers lie at centre ice at the Elgar Petersen Arena, home of the Humboldt Broncos, on April 8 as people gather for a vigil to honour the victims of a fatal bus accident two days previously involving the hockey team from Humboldt, Sask. CP...
JONATHAN HAYWARD/THE CANADIAN PRESS Flowers lie at centre ice at the Elgar Petersen Arena, home of the Humboldt Broncos, on April 8 as people gather for a vigil to honour the victims of a fatal bus accident two days previously involving the hockey team from Humboldt, Sask. CP...
 ?? JONATHAN HAYWARD/THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? The sun rises across the Prairies, revealing a cross made out of hockey sticks at a makeshift memorial at the intersecti­on where the Humboldt Broncos’ bus collided with a transport truck on April 6 while the Junior A hockey team was headed to Nipawin,...
JONATHAN HAYWARD/THE CANADIAN PRESS The sun rises across the Prairies, revealing a cross made out of hockey sticks at a makeshift memorial at the intersecti­on where the Humboldt Broncos’ bus collided with a transport truck on April 6 while the Junior A hockey team was headed to Nipawin,...

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