Car’s plunge off Disraeli fatal

SUV goes over bridge guardrail amid hazardous road conditions

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For an instant, it was as if the SUV was paused in the air, time frozen before it made its sudden plunge.

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Hey there, time traveller!
This article was published 19/01/2012 (5102 days ago), so information in it may no longer be current.

For an instant, it was as if the SUV was paused in the air, time frozen before it made its sudden plunge.

It was just a trick of the mind, a collusion of adrenaline and horror; but it was a sight that, for witnesses to a shocking Wednesday-afternoon accident on the Disraeli Bridge, was impossible to erase.

The crash sent a 19-year-old female driver, the lone occupant of the SUV, to hospital, where she was later declared dead, a source told the Free Press. Winnipeg police confirmed Wednesday night an adult female died in the crash.

WAYNE GLOWACKI / WINNIPEG FREE PRESS 
Emergency crews and construction workers at the scene where a vehicle crashed through a railing on the Disraeli Bridge and fell on the shore of the Red River Wednesday.
WAYNE GLOWACKI / WINNIPEG FREE PRESS Emergency crews and construction workers at the scene where a vehicle crashed through a railing on the Disraeli Bridge and fell on the shore of the Red River Wednesday.

As the wreckage was cleared away, shaken witnesses struggled to describe the horrifying chain of events that sent the purple SUV careening over the guardrail of the Disraeli Bridge and plummeting to the banks of the Red River.

“I don’t want to see anything like that ever again,” said Bruce Foster, who was driving only a few metres behind the SUV when the accident occurred, and grabbed his phone to dial 911. The sight left him “shaking like a leaf,” he said.

At almost exactly 2:30 p.m., Foster was driving south on the Disraeli, crawling along at 40 kilometres per hour on the slick bridge’s right lane, when he noticed the SUV cruising past him in the left lane.

Suddenly, it seemed as if the driver of the SUV lost control and slid into another vehicle. Foster pulled to a stop and watched as the SUV struck the median, spun and slid into the back end of a truck in front of Foster. For a moment, he locked eyes with the driver; he thought the SUV would come to a stop.

Instead, the SUV leaped forward and slammed into the guardrail on the west side of the bridge, striking two of the metal rail panels head-on. The rail collapsed and the SUV flew over the edge of the bridge, its wheels turning up to the sky.

A split-second later, the vehicle landed roof-down on the riverbank with a sickening bang.

Although it’s not clear why the SUV appeared to accelerate, Foster guessed the driver may have accidentally hit the gas pedal as she tried to stop her skid.

“I think she panicked. She should have come to a stop right there (when she hit the second car),” he said.

Wayne Glowacki / Winnipeg Free Press
Construction workers use their crane to raise an overturned vehicle that crashed through a railing on the Disraeli Bridge.
Wayne Glowacki / Winnipeg Free Press Construction workers use their crane to raise an overturned vehicle that crashed through a railing on the Disraeli Bridge.

“I can’t get her face out of my mind.”

After the crash, witnesses peered over the edge and watched as construction workers with PCL, who were working on the ongoing overhaul of the bridge, approached the wreckage and tried in silence to assist the victim.

Within minutes, dozens of rescue vehicles converged on nearby Talbot Avenue, near a path to the riverbank. After labouring for about 40 minutes and using the Jaws of Life, firefighters and paramedics were able to extricate the woman from the vehicle.

Near the riverbank, Blaine Stead braced against the frigid -36 wind chill and watched as rescuers hustled the woman, bundled onto a stretcher, into the back of an ambulance.

Stead and his son were driving on the Disraeli when he saw the SUV sail over the edge of the bridge. He thinks the SUV may have struck an old bump in the road before it skidded out of control.

The road conditions were “just like glass,” Stead said. “Everybody was sliding all over the place.”

Indeed, Wednesday’s snowfall and bracing cold saw the city’s roads become treacherous. While the Disraeli’s southbound lanes remained closed for hours as police investigated the accident, callers flooded afternoon radio shows with reports of fender-benders.

Only a few minutes north of the Disraeli Bridge accident, another crash reportedly closed one northbound lane of Henderson Highway.

KEN GIGLIOTTI / WINNIPEG FREE PRESS
An SUV crashed through the guard rail on the Disraeli  Freeway crashing to the ice below. The vehicle  landed upside down, a construction crane that was already on the ice for bridge construction work lifted the SUV so that the injured could be extricated.
KEN GIGLIOTTI / WINNIPEG FREE PRESS An SUV crashed through the guard rail on the Disraeli Freeway crashing to the ice below. The vehicle landed upside down, a construction crane that was already on the ice for bridge construction work lifted the SUV so that the injured could be extricated.

Still reeling from what he had seen, Foster urged Winnipeggers to be mindful of the slippery surfaces. “I just wish people would slow down when the conditions are bad,” he said. “That (accident) did not have to happen.”

Foster also called on the city to examine the condition of the rails that crumpled and fell when the SUV struck them. “I don’t know why they can’t make those rails a little stronger. It failed pretty quick,” he said. “I know those bridge rails could be made stronger.”

In the aftermath of the crash, some Winnipeggers wondered if construction on the bridge could have contributed to the tragedy. But city spokeswoman Tammy Melesko said there were no traffic detours at the spot where the accident occurred.

— with files from Jen Skerritt

melissa.martin@freepress.mb.ca

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Melissa Martin

Melissa Martin
Reporter-at-large

Melissa Martin reports and opines for the Winnipeg Free Press.

Every piece of reporting Melissa produces is reviewed by an editing team before it is posted online or published in print — part of the Free Press‘s tradition, since 1872, of producing reliable independent journalism. Read more about Free Press’s history and mandate, and learn how our newsroom operates.

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