Times Colonist

Alberta farm group wants date change to driver-training rules

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EDMONTON — A coalition representi­ng Alberta’s agricultur­e producers wants the province to change its launch date on new training rules for truck drivers.

The province said the date will stay in place.

Starting March 1, drivers of semi-trucks and commercial buses will need to take more extensive training, including work in the classroom and on the road, to qualify for a licence.

Team Alberta — representi­ng pulse growers, wheat and barley producers and others — said it’s worried the change will affect their operations. The group said a lot of seasonal work relies on truck drivers and it’s worried resources will not be in place to get them tested in time.

The changes were introduced last summer in response to a horrific crash in Saskatchew­an involving an Alberta-registered truck and a bus carrying the Humboldt Broncos hockey team.

An inexperien­ced truck driver blew through a stop sign and into the path of the bus.

Sixteen people were killed and 13 were injured.

The coalition said it supports improved road safety, but Don Shepert of the Alberta Pulse Growers said there is already a shortage of skilled farm workers and the new training rules will make that problem worse.

The Transporta­tion Department, in a statement, said the impact on farm operations will not be onerous. The department said the changes don’t apply to those who already have licences and only applies to drivers who have establishe­d residency in Alberta. It also said only about one in five of the 130,000 farm vehicles registered in Alberta will require a commercial licence.

“The government of Alberta is implementi­ng mandatory entry level training to enhance safety for everyone travelling on Alberta’s roads.”

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