Toronto Star

Two killed in fiery truck crash on 407

Witness says tanker crossed over barrier and exploded on impact

- PREMILA D’SA STAFF REPORTER

A fuel tanker crashed through a concrete barrier on Highway 407 flipping over and careening into oncoming traffic, killing two and filling the sky with fire and a plume of smoke on Halloween night.

Ontario Provincial Police said they responded to a collision involving two vehicles on Highway 407 between Dufferin and Keele Sts. The collision originated on the eastbound side of the highway between Dufferin and Keele.

The two victims were the driver of the tanker and the motorist in the other vehicle involved in the collision, OPP spokespers­on Kerry Schmidt, said in a video posted to Twitter.

The truck driver was a 41-yearold man from Brampton who collided into a 49-year old male driver from Mississaug­a, he said.

Schmidt described the truck as crossing over from the westbound lane to the eastbound side, crashing into an oncoming vehicle on the eastbound lane. The collision caused a fire and “significan­t” damage to the highway, OPP said.

OPP Staff Sgt. Carolle Dionne said accidents involving any type of vehicle carrying fuel can be dangerous: “There is always the risk of fire with a fuel tanker or any vehicle carrying dangerous goods.”

Paramedics said they did not take any other patients to hos- pital.

Spokespers­on Gary Fineberg said two people were pronounced dead at the scene.

Robert Kostiuk said he was driving down the route, which he takes every day, when he saw the truck go from being straight on the right lane, to suddenly turning perpendicu­lar and flipping over the concrete barrier on the highway.

“There was no in-between, there was no kind of swerving over,” he said. “It was a 90-degree turn, but still at full speed it looked like.”

He said the explosion after the truck flipped was immediate.

“Instead of even just smoulderin­g, it exploded,” said Kostiuk. “It wasn’t a fire, it was an explosion.”

Kostiuk said he pulled over to call 911, who told him they had already received several calls about the accident, and then he drove away, as the fire grew bigger.

“When I was passing by, you could feel the heat inside of your vehicle, that’s how intense the fire was — it was a fireball.”

York deputy fire chief Andew Zvanitajs said fire services haven’t yet determined exactly what fuel the tanker was carrying other than it’s a hydrocarbo­n. The emissions caused by the fire don’t warrant an evacuation, he said, but added that tests were going to be conducted.

In the first half of 2018, the OPP responded to 33 fatal collisions involving transport trucks, a 38 per cent increase over last year. A total of 41 people died in those collisions.

 ?? WARREN LIEBMANN PHOTO ?? The collision involved multiple vehicles on Hwy. 407 between Dufferin and Keele Sts. on Wednesday afternoon.
WARREN LIEBMANN PHOTO The collision involved multiple vehicles on Hwy. 407 between Dufferin and Keele Sts. on Wednesday afternoon.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada