‘Our hearts are broken’ Fifteen dead, 10 injured after seniors bus collides with semi-trailer on Trans-Canada

A seniors bus outing to a rural casino on a clear June day ended with 15 people dead and 10 seriously injured after a fiery crash on the Trans-Canada Highway, in a case that echoed the shocking Humboldt Broncos bus tragedy in Saskatchewan.

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This article was published 15/06/2023 (855 days ago), so information in it may no longer be current.

A seniors bus outing to a rural casino on a clear June day ended with 15 people dead and 10 seriously injured after a fiery crash on the Trans-Canada Highway, in a case that echoed the shocking Humboldt Broncos bus tragedy in Saskatchewan.

“Sadly, this is a day in Manitoba and across Canada that will be remembered as one of tragedy and incredible sadness. I want to express my deepest condolences on behalf of the RCMP to every family member who is grieving today,” RCMP Assistant Commissioner Rob Hill said.

Law enforcement and health-care officials were visibly moved at a news briefing five hours after the crash — one of the deadliest in Canada in recent history — near Carberry.

The seniors, who were from Dauphin and the surrounding area, were on a bus trip to Sand Hills Casino, 170 kilometres west of Winnipeg, when it collided with a semi-trailer just before noon Thursday.

The bus was described as a handi-transit type of vehicle.

“I also want to acknowledge there are many people in Dauphin and the surrounding areas anxiously awaiting news about a loved one. To all those waiting, I can’t imagine how difficult it is not knowing if the person you love the most will be making it home tonight,” said Hill.

Officials went to great pains to comfort families, who still hadn’t been told who was among the dead, saying they would work as quickly as they could to provide information.

“Answers will take some time, but I assure you RCMP will get the answers,” said Manitoba RCMP Supt. Rob Lasson, adding it was too early to assign blame.

SKILLED TRUCKERS CANADA / FACEBOOK
                                The bus was coming from Dauphin and was carrying seniors on a trip to a casino.

SKILLED TRUCKERS CANADA / FACEBOOK

The bus was coming from Dauphin and was carrying seniors on a trip to a casino.

“There could be a criminal element to this investigation. We need to get everything right.”

The drivers of both vehicles survived and were being treated in hospital. Survivors were taken to four hospitals, including Brandon and Winnipeg’s Health Sciences Centre, officials said.

Police said it would take time to positively identify the dead, and officers were working with the help of the medical examiner.

RCMP said the semi-trailer was heading eastbound on Highway 1 and the seniors’ vehicle was headed southbound on Highway 5.

The bus had crossed the westbound lanes of Highway 1, and was crossing the eastbound lanes when it was struck by the semi.

SKILLED TRUCKERS CANADA / FACEBOOK
                                The highway was closed to both eastbound and westbound traffic at Highway 5. Westbound lanes reopened Thursday afternoon.

SKILLED TRUCKERS CANADA / FACEBOOK

The highway was closed to both eastbound and westbound traffic at Highway 5. Westbound lanes reopened Thursday afternoon.

The tragedy brought back memories of the 2018 collision that killed 16 people and injured 13 when the Humboldt junior hockey team’s bus was struck by a semi on a rural Saskatchewan highway.

Manitoba officers would be assisted by their Saskatchewan counterparts, including some of the primary investigators who responded to the 2018 crash, RCMP said.

A family support centre had been set up at a Lutheran church in Dauphin to provide support to area families.

While Premier Heather Stefanson didn’t attend the news conference, she offered condolences. The Manitoba government said flags at the legislature had been lowered to half-mast.

“Our hearts are broken and our thoughts are with the families,” deputy premier Cliff Cullen told the news conference. Everyone involved would be offered crisis support mental health services in the hours and days ahead, he said.

NIRMESH VADERA PHOTO
                                STARS air ambulance sent two helicopters and two planes to respond to the crash.

NIRMESH VADERA PHOTO

STARS air ambulance sent two helicopters and two planes to respond to the crash.

The mass casualties prompted hospitals in Winnipeg and Brandon to declare a code orange alert, which lasted for nearly five hours.

ER nurses lined up in halls to receive patients, surgery teams cleared slates, and the health system took an all-hands-on-deck approach, said Jennifer Cumpsty, HSC executive director of acute health services.

“Paramedics and first responders spend their entire careers preparing for a day like this, hoping it will never come. Today, it came, and all of them did their jobs with the utmost skill and professionalism,” Cumpsty said, offering her condolences to victims’ families.

No patients were sent to hospitals out of province.

Following the collision, the bus could be seen in a ditch; the truck had stopped on the shoulder of the highway. The roof of the small bus had burned off.

NIRMESH VADERA PHOTO
                                The roof of the van had burned off after the crash.

NIRMESH VADERA PHOTO

The roof of the van had burned off after the crash.

Tarps covered bodies in seven or eight locations. Wheelchairs and crumpled walkers remained near the tarps. A stop sign had been knocked down.

Lasson declined to speak about the condition of the crash site out of respect for the families, he said.

“The biggest challenge on these types of investigations is just to keep emotions in check for police officers. There’s a lot of grieving, a lot of hurt going on,” he said.

Twelve ambulances and at least one air ambulance were dispatched to the scene, which closed down the Trans-Canada in both directions for hours.

William Doherty, CEO of Day & Ross, the New Brunswick transport company that owns the truck, didn’t have more details on the crash but offered his condolences.

“All of us at Day & Ross are heartbroken by the tragic news out of Manitoba this afternoon,” he said in a statement. “The thoughts of the entire Day & Ross team are with those who have lost loved ones.”

Brandon resident Tracy Leitch was driving west on Highway 1 when she saw smoke billowing in the air. She passed the scene moments later.

“(The bus) was burnt right to the ground,” said Leitch, who was driving to the U.S. “I was in shock a little bit, and almost wanted to start crying. I felt sorry for all the people involved and the families. Just heartbroken.”

Nirmesh Vadera, who works at the Robin’s Nest Hotel and Cafe near the intersection, went outside to see what was happening after noticing emergency services vehicles.

Firefighters were trying to extinguish the bus fire, while the injured were tended to, he said.

MIKAELA MACKENZIE / WINNIPEG FREE PRESS
                                The site of a crash between a bus and a semi-trailer, which killed 15 seniors, on the Trans-Canada Highway north of Carberry.

MIKAELA MACKENZIE / WINNIPEG FREE PRESS

The site of a crash between a bus and a semi-trailer, which killed 15 seniors, on the Trans-Canada Highway north of Carberry.

“It was horrible to see. I’ve never seen that kind of (crash). It’s really hard to describe how bad it was,” he said, adding collisions occasionally occur at the intersection.

“The junction is really bad.”

All available resources in western Manitoba had been deployed to assist first responders, and officers in its major crime services had taken control of the investigation, RCMP said.

Caroline Bleackley, a trucker from B.C. who was on her way to Winnipeg, said she was approaching the intersection around noon when she saw heavy smoke billowing from a vehicle in the ditch.

Traffic had been stopped in all directions, with at least two fire trucks on the scene, she said.

MATT GOERZEN / THE BRANDON SUN
                                An RCMP officer takes a photo of a semi truck owned by Day & Ross, that was involved in a deadly collision with a small bus carrying seniors near Carberry on Thursday afternoon.

MATT GOERZEN / THE BRANDON SUN

An RCMP officer takes a photo of a semi truck owned by Day & Ross, that was involved in a deadly collision with a small bus carrying seniors near Carberry on Thursday afternoon.

“I could see there were people laying on the ground and people trying to attend to the bodies on the ground,” Bleackley said by phone. “I have seen collisions before, but not like this; not of this magnitude.”

Bleackley was unsure whether paramedics had arrived by that time. She later saw four or five ambulances heading toward the scene.

Around 3:30 p.m., the westbound lanes of the Trans-Canada Highway were reopened. Eastbound lanes at Highway 5 remained closed and a detour, using service roads, was in effect.

Family members seeking information on loved ones who may have been travelling on the bus can call the main switchboard phone lines at HSC (204-787-3661) or Brandon Regional Health Centre (204-578-4080) or the RCMP family support centre in the Dauphin church basement (204-647-5058).

— with files from Brandon Sun

TIM SMITH / THE BRANDON SUN
                                A critical care team loads a victim into a plane for transport to the Health Sciences Centre in Winnipeg.

TIM SMITH / THE BRANDON SUN

A critical care team loads a victim into a plane for transport to the Health Sciences Centre in Winnipeg.

Two STARS Air Ambulances and multiple air ambulance planes transported patients to Winnipeg. (Tim Smith / The Brandon Sun)
Two STARS Air Ambulances and multiple air ambulance planes transported patients to Winnipeg. (Tim Smith / The Brandon Sun)
JESSICA LEE / WINNIPEG FREE PRESS
                                Deputy Premier Cliff Cullen (right) speaks June 15, 2023 at a press conference briefing media on the mass casualty vehicle accident in Carberry.

JESSICA LEE / WINNIPEG FREE PRESS

Deputy Premier Cliff Cullen (right) speaks June 15, 2023 at a press conference briefing media on the mass casualty vehicle accident in Carberry.

MATT GOERZEN / THE BRANDON SUN
                                A STARS Air Ambulance helicopter flies out from behind a line of vehicles along the eastbound lanes of the Trans-Canada Highway after the highway lanes were shut down on Thursday afternoon, due to a severe collision at the Highway 5 intersection.

MATT GOERZEN / THE BRANDON SUN

A STARS Air Ambulance helicopter flies out from behind a line of vehicles along the eastbound lanes of the Trans-Canada Highway after the highway lanes were shut down on Thursday afternoon, due to a severe collision at the Highway 5 intersection.

MIKAELA MACKENZIE / WINNIPEG FREE PRESS
                                The site of a crash between a bus and a semi-trailer.

MIKAELA MACKENZIE / WINNIPEG FREE PRESS

The site of a crash between a bus and a semi-trailer.

MIKAELA MACKENZIE / WINNIPEG FREE PRESS
                                The site of a crash between a bus and a semi-trailer.

MIKAELA MACKENZIE / WINNIPEG FREE PRESS

The site of a crash between a bus and a semi-trailer.

Police tape lines the scene of a deadly collision between a semi truck and a small busy carrying seniors at the corner of Highway 5 and the Trans-Canada Highway near Carberry on Thursday afternoon. (Matt Goerzen/The Brandon Sun)
Police tape lines the scene of a deadly collision between a semi truck and a small busy carrying seniors at the corner of Highway 5 and the Trans-Canada Highway near Carberry on Thursday afternoon. (Matt Goerzen/The Brandon Sun)
A small burned out transport bus lies in the ditch on the south side of the Trans-Canada Highway at the intersection with Highway 5 near Carberry on Thursday afternoon. Several people died as a result of the bus's collision with a semi truck at the scene, while several others were taken to hospital by ambulance and STARS Air Ambulance helicopters. (Matt Goerzen/The Brandon Sun)
A small burned out transport bus lies in the ditch on the south side of the Trans-Canada Highway at the intersection with Highway 5 near Carberry on Thursday afternoon. Several people died as a result of the bus's collision with a semi truck at the scene, while several others were taken to hospital by ambulance and STARS Air Ambulance helicopters. (Matt Goerzen/The Brandon Sun)
An unidentified individual walks in front of a semi truck that collided with a small bus carrying seniors at the corner of Highway 5 and the Trans-Canada Highway near Carberry on Thursday afternoon. (Matt Goerzen/The Brandon Sun)
An unidentified individual walks in front of a semi truck that collided with a small bus carrying seniors at the corner of Highway 5 and the Trans-Canada Highway near Carberry on Thursday afternoon. (Matt Goerzen/The Brandon Sun)
An unidentified person  watches an officer with Manitoba Motor Carrier Enforcement inspect the inside of a semi truck that was involved in a deadly collision with a multi-person transport van on Thursday afternoon at the intersection of Highway 5 and the Trans-Canada Highway near Carberry. (Matt Goerzen/The Brandon Sun)
An unidentified person watches an officer with Manitoba Motor Carrier Enforcement inspect the inside of a semi truck that was involved in a deadly collision with a multi-person transport van on Thursday afternoon at the intersection of Highway 5 and the Trans-Canada Highway near Carberry. (Matt Goerzen/The Brandon Sun)
A small burned out transport bus lies in the ditch on the south side of the Trans-Canada Highway at the intersection with Highway 5 near Carberry on Thursday afternoon. Several people died as a result of the bus's collision with a semi truck at the scene, while several others were taken to hospital by ambulance and STARS Air Ambulance helicopters. (Matt Goerzen/The Brandon Sun)
A small burned out transport bus lies in the ditch on the south side of the Trans-Canada Highway at the intersection with Highway 5 near Carberry on Thursday afternoon. Several people died as a result of the bus's collision with a semi truck at the scene, while several others were taken to hospital by ambulance and STARS Air Ambulance helicopters. (Matt Goerzen/The Brandon Sun)

‘Unfathomable tragedy’

Political leaders extended condolences after 15 seniors were killed, and 10 others were injured, in a collision on the Trans-Canada Highway Thursday.

‘The news from Carberry, Manitoba is incredibly tragic. I’m sending my deepest condolences to those who lost loved ones today, and I’m keeping the injured in my thoughts. I cannot imagine the pain those affected are feeling — but Canadians are here for you.’

— Prime Minister Justin Trudeau

‘On behalf of all Manitobans, I am shocked and heartbroken to learn about the unfathomable tragedy near the Town of Carberry earlier today. This is a devastating tragedy for our province, and I know all Manitobans will join me in offering heartfelt thoughts and prayers to the friends and family directly impacted.’

— Lieut-Gov. Anita Neville

‘Our hearts are broken and our thoughts are with the families and loved ones of all the lives impacted by the horrific and devastating tragedy near the town of Carberry. I know our dedicated first responders and health-care workers are doing all they can to assist and I want to thank them on behalf of all Manitobans.’

— Premier Heather Stefanson

‘Heartbreaking news from Carberry today. My heart goes out to the victims, their families & all those impacted by this horrifying incident. Immense gratitude for the efforts of Manitoba’s first responders, who will also carry the weight of this tragedy with them.’

— Winnipeg Mayor Scott Gillingham

Other deadly crashes in Canada that rocked the nation:

Humboldt Broncos bus crash in Saskatchewan: 2018

On April 6, 2018, a bus carrying the Humboldt Broncos junior hockey team struck a tractor-trailer that had failed to yield at a stop sign near Armley, Sask. Thirteen were injured and 16 died, including 10 players, an athletic therapist, a statistician, a radio announcer, and the bus’s driver. The semi driver, Jaskirat Singh Sidhu, pleaded guilty to 16 counts of dangerous operation causing death and 13 counts of dangerous operation causing bodily injury. He was sentenced to eight years.

Les Eboulements, Que.: 1997

The deadliest road accident in Canadian history, a bus carrying 47 elderly people careened into a ravine after its brakes failed on a hill, killing 44 on Oct. 13, 1997, according to La Presse newspaper.

Eastsman, Que.: 1978

A bus carrying people with disabilities fell into Lac d’Argent in Quebec’s asbestos region when its brakes failed on Aug. 4, 1978. 41 people drowned, according to a New York Times report.

Webb, Sask.: 1980

A bus carrying Canadian Pacific rail workers was struck by a car, tipping on its side, before it was struck by a tanker-truck on May 28, 1980, killing 22, Saskatchewan newspapers reported.

Lac-Bouchette, Que.: 1993

Nineteen people died, included 17 church parishioners, died after a minibus and pickup truck collided head on July 16, 1993, according to wire service United Press International.

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History

Updated on Thursday, June 15, 2023 1:59 PM CDT: Updates hed

Updated on Thursday, June 15, 2023 2:15 PM CDT: Adds details from scene

Updated on Thursday, June 15, 2023 2:46 PM CDT: Adds comment from Shared Health

Updated on Thursday, June 15, 2023 2:52 PM CDT: Adds eyewitness account

Updated on Thursday, June 15, 2023 3:00 PM CDT: Adds RCMP comment

Updated on Thursday, June 15, 2023 3:13 PM CDT: Adds more detail from scene, video.

Updated on Thursday, June 15, 2023 3:34 PM CDT: Westbound lanes reopen

Updated on Thursday, June 15, 2023 4:01 PM CDT: Adds statement from Premier Heather Stefanson

Updated on Thursday, June 15, 2023 4:12 PM CDT: Adds eyewitness account

Updated on Thursday, June 15, 2023 4:31 PM CDT: Adds destination as casino

Updated on Thursday, June 15, 2023 4:37 PM CDT: Adds casino spokesperson

Updated on Thursday, June 15, 2023 5:19 PM CDT: Updates following RCMP press conference.

Updated on Thursday, June 15, 2023 5:59 PM CDT: Updates with statement from Justin Trudeau

Updated on Thursday, June 15, 2023 8:15 PM CDT: Adds files from the Brandon Sun.

Updated on Thursday, June 15, 2023 10:13 PM CDT: Updates with statement from William Doherty, CEO of Day & Ross

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