Times Colonist

Province must fix deadly TCH stretch: mayor

- CINDY E. HARNETT ceharnett@timescolon­ist.com

Langford Mayor Stew Young is calling on the province to make urgent improvemen­ts, starting next week, to a stretch of provincial highway that has seen two deadly crashes in two months.

A 24-year old Nanaimo man died after a head-on crash Sunday on the Trans-Canada Highway near the Leigh Road overpass, closing the highway for five hours.

A crash in the same area on Jan. 8 also caused a fatality.

“This is an emergency priority because of the two deadly accidents and the 40 crashes that have occurred on that one stretch of space” in the last two years, said Young.

On Monday, West Shore RCMP Insp. Todd Preston and Langford Fire Chief Chris Aubrey wrote to the mayor reiteratin­g the urgent need on the Trans-Canada Highway for concrete barriers to separate northbound and southbound traffic and widening of the highway to four lanes between Leigh Road and the West Shore Parkway.

They also stressed the need for temporary barriers and trafficcal­ming measures to be installed now; they would remain until the road widening is complete.

“Combined, these measures will hopefully mitigate the severity of the crashes,” wrote Aubrey.

Preston said he agrees the problem requires immediate attention.

“The sad and tragic impact on the families and friends of the victims of two recent fatal accidents is a great cause for concern and if we can do anything to mitigate the outcome of any future accidents, then time is of the essence.”

Preston said concrete barriers help prevent motorists from travelling into oncoming traffic as they attempt to avoid another motorist or traffic incident.

Young said he has met with the province and urged the road improvemen­ts on the provincial highway in Langford — the addition of barriers between north and southbound traffic and the addition of an extra through road.

Planning and design work was announced and funded for the project in March 2016 and at the time Langford did blasting and other preparator­y work. Constructi­on funding has not been announced.

“We understand that this design work has been complete for some time, but the constructi­on of the roadwork has not yet gone to tender,” said Young in his letter to B.C. Premier John Horgan and Transporta­tion Minister Claire Trevena.

On Thursday, because of the fatal Jan. 8 crash on the TransCanad­a, the city asked for the province to expedite the work and it was agreed that it could “move ahead” in the summer, Young said.

That all changed Sunday when a southbound BMW carrying two passengers and a northbound Acura with three passengers collided head-on just after 1 p.m. — near the Leigh Road overpass (between Exit 14 and Highway 1A) in Langford.

West Shore RCMP said passengers in the BMW had no serious injuries, however, those travelling in the Acura — in which the driver was killed — suffered “significan­t injuries.”

In the Jan. 8 crash, the driver was killed and a passenger was seriously hurt.

“We owe it to the families now to fix this,” said Young, suggesting work by the province should start next week. “There’s no time like now. Barriers save lives. It needs to be done immediatel­y.”

The B.C. Coroners Service confirmed it is investigat­ing.

“I can confirm we are in the early stages of our fact-finding investigat­ion involving a male in his 20s from Nanaimo to determine how, where, when and by what means he came to his death,” said B.C. Coroners Service spokesman Andy Watson.

 ?? CHEK NEWS ?? A 24-year old Nanaimo man died after a head-on crash Sunday on the Trans-Canada Highway near the Leigh Road overpass.
CHEK NEWS A 24-year old Nanaimo man died after a head-on crash Sunday on the Trans-Canada Highway near the Leigh Road overpass.
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