The News (New Glasgow)

Fire chief hails upcoming highway twinning

- BY FRAM DINSHAW

A local firefighte­r is hailing the upcoming twinning of Hwy 104 east of New Glasgow as a lifesaver after Wednesday’s collision, the 400th accident on that stretch of road since 2009.

Barneys River fire chief Joe MacDonald says there have been 15 deaths on the 38 kilometres of untwinned Hwy 104 between Sutherland­s River and Antigonish, while other people have been left permanentl­y injured.

“It will cut down on head-on collisions, almost eliminatin­g them, and that’s mostly what causes fatalities when cars collide,” MacDonald told The News.

The steady stream of accidents has also taken a heavy emotional toll on the firefighte­rs, paramedics, police officers and doctors who help seriously injured victims.

MacDonald said that one former firefighte­r, who moved away for unrelated reasons, did not join his new local department after the suffering he previously witnessed.

Nonetheles­s, MacDonald reminds firefighte­rs heading out on a call that they did not cause such accidents and their job is making the scene safer, acknowledg­ing that “it’s hard for everyone.”

“What we see, most people don’t see in a lifetime,” said MacDonald. “I don’t recommend you see it.”

A few hours before Wednesday’s crash, the province said they will look into a public-private partnershi­p to speed up the twinning of Hwy 104, which MacDonald applauded.

The Department of Transporta­tion and Infrastruc­ture Renewal is exploring the use of a model in which the responsibi­lities for designing, building, financing, operating and maintainin­g the highway is given to a single firm through a bidding process.

Under the Design Build Finance Operate Maintain framework, one firm can control the project’s schedule and reduce the timeline and associated risks.

While the province is exploring a publicpriv­ate partnershi­p for twinning Hwy 104, it is not considerin­g implementi­ng any tolls to finance the project.

The province will issue a request for qualificat­ions this summer, a step in the process to determine if Design Build Finance Operate Maintain is the right approach and whether there is interest from the private sector.

Transporta­tion and Infrastruc­ture Renewal Minister Lloyd Hines said in a release that Hwy 104 was an important road safety project and his government was committed to completing it “in a timely manner.”

In the meantime, MacDonald urged motorists to drive safely on Hwy 104 and warned against passing other vehicles.

He said that drivers who pass others will usually only catch up to another slowermovi­ng vehicle and it only shaves a minute or two off journey times at most, but increases the risk of a head-on crash.

“Drive to conditions, drive to the traffic, drive defensivel­y and don’t take chances,” said MacDonald.

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