Calgary Herald

Independen­t probe into train crash urged

CP Police Service’s investigat­ion into fatal incident was flawed: labour groups

- DANIELA GERMANO AND JOHN COTTER

Two labour groups are calling for an independen­t investigat­ion into the deaths of three Canadian Pacific Railway employees in a British Columbia train crash almost a year ago.

Conductor Dylan Paradis, engineer Andrew Dockrell and trainee Daniel Waldenberg­er-bulmer died last February after a two-kilometre-long runaway grain train fell more than 60 metres from a bridge. The train took off near Field, B.C., about 15 kilometres west of the Alberta boundary, when its air brakes failed.

After the crash, Transport Canada ordered that all railway companies must use handbrakes when trains are stopped on a mountain grade after an emergency use of their air brakes.

The Alberta Federation of Labour alleges the CP Police Service, which is directly employed by the railway, conducted a flawed investigat­ion.

“The deaths of these workers have yet to be fully investigat­ed by an independen­t body to determine if there is any criminal liability on behalf of CP Rail,” federation president Gil Mcgowan said in an emailed statement.

“The investigat­ion from the outset was narrowly focused on the three workers killed and their actions, while ignoring the role CP Rail and management played.”

Teamsters Canada, the union that represents CP employees, said the RCMP must be called in.

“If CP has nothing to hide, they should welcome an outside investigat­ion for the sake of the families and all those affected by this disaster,” president Francois Laporte said in a statement.

Laporte also called on the federal government to ban all forms of private policing.

“Corporate police forces have no place in the modern world,” he said. “It is absurd that a company should be able to criminally investigat­e itself. They’ll never find themselves guilty of anything.”

CP Railway noted Wednesday that the Transporta­tion Safety Board as well as Employment and Social Developmen­t Canada are doing their own investigat­ions into the crash.

“CP is open and willing to review the facts surroundin­g this event with the RCMP, the TSB and other authorized agencies and continues to co-operate fully,” spokesman Jeremy Berry said in an email.

Calls for the RCMP to criminally investigat­e CP Railway come after CBC’S Fifth Estate investigat­ive news program this week featured an interview with a former CP police officer. He alleged the company prevented him from obtaining key witness accounts, withheld evidence and ordered officers to keep the investigat­ion narrowly focused on the crew.

After the program aired, the TSB’S lead safety investigat­or on the crash told the CBC that the RCMP should investigat­e potential negligence by the railway company.

The TSB issued an online statement Tuesday saying it was “completely inappropri­ate” for its investigat­or to voice any opinion implying civil or criminal liability.

“(It’s) very clear that it is not the function of the board to assign fault or determine civil or criminal liability,” the agency said.

“The TSB advised CBC late on Jan. 27, 2020, that it does not share the view of this investigat­or.”

The RCMP said the lead agency handling the investigat­ion was the CP police, since the crash happened on company property.

However, the RCMP added it has the authority to investigat­e criminal matters across Canada and will be reviewing the case to determine its next steps.

“We are mindful that the TSB investigat­ion is still underway and therefore we will restrict our comments accordingl­y,” Staff Sgt. Janelle Shoihet said in a statement.

Investigat­ion … was narrowly focused on the three workers killed and their actions, while ignoring the role CP Rail … played.

 ??  ?? Daniel Waldenberg­er-bulmer, left, Andrew Dockrell, centre, and Dylan Paradis, were killed in a train derailment near Field., B.C., on Feb. 4, 2019.
Daniel Waldenberg­er-bulmer, left, Andrew Dockrell, centre, and Dylan Paradis, were killed in a train derailment near Field., B.C., on Feb. 4, 2019.

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