Truro News

Humboldt Broncos bus crash chosen as Story of the Year

‘No story affected Canadians in 2018 more than the Humboldt Broncos bus crash.’

- BY CHRIS PURDY

A deadly bus crash that united a hockey-mad country in grief and spurred people to leave sticks on porches from coast to coast has been selected as Canada’s News Story of the Year.

The Canadian Press annual survey of newsrooms across the country saw 53 out of 129 editors cast their votes for the Humboldt Broncos bus crash in rural Saskatchew­an as the most compelling story of 2018.

The legalizati­on of recreation­al cannabis in October came a close second with 51 votes.

“Although cannabis is landmark legislatio­n, legalizati­on arrived mostly with a shrug,” wrote Murray Wood, provincial news director with Saskatchew­an radio stations CJME and CKOM.

“No story affected Canadians in 2018 more than the Humboldt Broncos bus crash.”

The junior hockey team was on its way to a playoff game when its bus and a semi-truck collided at a crossroads on April 6. Sixteen people were killed. Another 13 were injured.

The crash made headlines around the world and struck a chord with hockey-loving Canadians, many of whom saw themselves and their children in the young players and their grieving families.

Some of the players were changing into suits and others were texting girlfriend­s as the Junior A team’s bus headed to Nipawin for a matchup against the Hawks. It was at an intersecti­on just north of Tisdale where the bus and a truck carrying a load of peat moss collided.

Motorists who stopped to help, as well as some parents who were also on their way to the game, were met with a chaotic, gruesome scene. Those who survived were sent to nearby hospitals, the dead to a makeshift morgue.

Aerial pictures of the devastatio­n are seared into the nation’s memory.

“Almost everyone in this coun- try has climbed onto a bus with their peers or put a child on a bus for an out-of-town trip,” wrote Tim Switzer, managing editor of the Regina Leader-post newspaper. “Many people could relate.”

Ten players along with the team’s coach, an assistant coach, trainer, radio play-by-play announcer, statistici­an and the bus driver were killed. Of the injured, two players were paralyzed and two received serious brain injuries.

“The aching void of unrealized potential, the memorial services, and the fundraiser­s captured the interest of Canadians – in an event basically unmatched since Terry Fox’s death in the middle of his Marathon of Hope almost 40 years ago,” said Bill Mcguire, editorial page editor of Charlottet­own’s Guardian newspaper.

Canadians and others around the world started leaving hockey sticks on their front porches to honour the team. Many sticks are still standing outside.

“You only had to walk through the streets of Toronto for weeks afterwards and see all these hockey sticks on the front steps of people’s homes to know that this horrific accident, so many thousands of kilometres away, had reached in and tugged on the hearts of every hockeylovi­ng Canadian,” said Janet Hurley, a senior editor at the Toronto Star.

People from more than 80 countries donated $15 million to support those on the bus and their families, making it the second-highest Gofundme fundraiser of the year next to the Time’s Up legal defence fund to fight sexual harassment and discrimina­tion.

Lorne Motley, editor-in-chief of the Calgary Herald and Calgary Sun, noted that the Humboldt story continues to make headlines about truck-driver training, the painstakin­g recovery of survivors and calls from players’ families for mandatory seatbelts on buses and trucks.

The story will continue to be in the news in the new year.

RCMP have charged the truck’s driver, Jaskirat Sidhu, with 16 counts of dangerous driving causing death and 13 counts of dangerous driving causing bodily injury.

Sukhmander Singh, owner of Adesh Deol Trucking in Calgary, also faces eight charges relating to non-compliance with federal and provincial safety regulation­s in the months before the crash.

 ?? JONATHAN HAYWARD/THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Flowers lie at centre ice as people gather for a vigil at the Elgar Petersen Arena, home of the Humboldt Broncos, to honour the victims of a fatal bus accident in Humboldt, Sask., on Sunday, April 8.
JONATHAN HAYWARD/THE CANADIAN PRESS Flowers lie at centre ice as people gather for a vigil at the Elgar Petersen Arena, home of the Humboldt Broncos, to honour the victims of a fatal bus accident in Humboldt, Sask., on Sunday, April 8.
 ?? KAYLE NEIS/THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Truck driver Jaskirat Sidhu is seen walking out of provincial court after appearing for charges stemming from the Humboldt Broncos bus crash in Melfort, Sask. Sidhu is charged with 16 counts of dangerous driving causing death and 13 more of dangerous driving causing bodily harm. The case has been adjourned until the new year.
KAYLE NEIS/THE CANADIAN PRESS Truck driver Jaskirat Sidhu is seen walking out of provincial court after appearing for charges stemming from the Humboldt Broncos bus crash in Melfort, Sask. Sidhu is charged with 16 counts of dangerous driving causing death and 13 more of dangerous driving causing bodily harm. The case has been adjourned until the new year.

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