Province commits $12M to redesign highway intersection where crash killed 17 seniors

DAUPHIN — Vowing to put safety first, the Manitoba government announced it will spend $12 million to redesign a dangerous highway intersection, the site of a devastating crash between a mini-bus and tractor-trailer last June that claimed the lives of 17 seniors.

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This article was published 08/01/2024 (634 days ago), so information in it may no longer be current.

DAUPHIN — Vowing to put safety first, the Manitoba government announced it will spend $12 million to redesign a dangerous highway intersection, the site of a devastating crash between a mini-bus and tractor-trailer last June that claimed the lives of 17 seniors.

Transportation and Infrastructure Minister Lisa Naylor confirmed the commitment in an interview with the Free Press over the weekend, prior to the public release of a third-party report that revealed a series of safety concerns with the intersection of the Trans-Canada Highway and Highway 5, just north of Carberry.

RCMP crash investigation in hands of prosecution service

The RCMP investigation into a highway crash that killed 17 seniors has been sent to Manitoba Prosecutions for review and an opinion on whether charges should be laid, the Free Press has learned.

Families were told the findings were submitted to the Crown on Jan. 4, following six months of investigation.

They were told the Crown’s review and decision could take weeks or months.

The RCMP investigation into a highway crash that killed 17 seniors has been sent to Manitoba Prosecutions for review and an opinion on whether charges should be laid, the Free Press has learned.

Families were told the findings were submitted to the Crown on Jan. 4, following six months of investigation.

They were told the Crown’s review and decision could take weeks or months.

RCMP spokeswoman Tara Seel said a package was sent to the Crown based on the investigation to date.

“The investigation continues,” she wrote in an email.

The crash involved a mini-bus, which was taking seniors from Dauphin to a Carberry-area casino, and a tractor-trailer.

The mini-bus was southbound on Highway 5 when it crossed into the path of a tractor-trailer, which had the right-of-way in the Trans-Canada Highway’s eastbound lanes.

The bus driver was hospitalized with serious injuries.

Seel said he has not yet been interviewed.

Manitoba’s Personal Health Information Act prevents police from explaining why.

A provincial government spokesperson confirmed Manitoba Prosecution Services has received the file from the RCMP.

— Staff

“The intersection can be made safer and that’s what we aim to do,” Naylor said.

The comprehensive 179-page report, called an “in-service road safety review” and undertaken by Canadian engineering consulting firm WSP, was released Monday during a news conference in Dauphin, where many of the crash victims, all of whom were passengers on the mini-bus, were from.

The study found the intersection’s design and driver behaviour increase the risk of serious crashes, while offering 34 potential countermeasures to reduce the likelihood of fatalities or injuries.

A complete redesign is among eight high-priority “countermeasures” identified in the report, which noted further study is necessary to determine which design is most cost-effective or suitable.

Premier Wab Kinew said the intersection will eventually have a grade-separated interchange, the cost of which is currently estimated at upwards of $100 million. Kinew, who attended the news conference alongside Naylor and Ron Kostyshyn, MLA for Dauphin, said the grade-separated interchange project wouldn’t be complete for 20 to 25 years.

The province will, however, proceed with one of three options to improve safety at the intersection in the short term: widening the median located between the divided lanes of the Trans-Canada; creating a roundabout; or establishing an “RCUT” — also referred to as a J-turn intersection — in which drivers turn onto a main road and make a U-turn at a one-way median.

TIM SMITH / WINNIPEG FREE PRESS Flanked by Dauphin MLA and Minister of Agriculture Ron Kostyshyn (left) and Premier Wab Kinew, Minister of Transportation and Infrastructure Lisa Naylor speaks during a press conference at the Parkland Recreation Complex in Dauphin on Monday.
TIM SMITH / WINNIPEG FREE PRESS

Flanked by Dauphin MLA and Minister of Agriculture Ron Kostyshyn (left) and Premier Wab Kinew, Minister of Transportation and Infrastructure Lisa Naylor speaks during a press conference at the Parkland Recreation Complex in Dauphin on Monday.

Before details of the third-party report were made public Monday, Kinew, Naylor and provincial staff met with victims’ families and survivors in Dauphin to explain the three options.

“I want to acknowledge that we cannot make things right or make you whole, but we are going to work our hardest to ensure that something like this does not happen again,” Kinew said at the news conference, attended by about a dozen people, including families of the victims and Dauphin residents.

“I want to acknowledge that we cannot make things right or make you whole, but we are going to work our hardest to ensure that something like this does not happen again.”–Premier Wab Kinew

He said the government, along with input from Manitobans, will choose the “safest” of the three options.

A contract for a functional design for the interim rebuild will be tendered soon, with the work expected to begin in February, the province said. The design will produce a revised cost estimate and preliminary design. The province expects construction to start in 2025 and wrap up by the fall of 2026.

The report did not recommend adding traffic lights or further reducing the speed limit because the measures could heighten safety risks.

The study included a two-day site visit, new traffic count, review of 10 years of documents and collision data and consideration of human factors.

Video cameras set up at the intersection after the crash recorded several near-misses.

Engineers identified a variety of potential safety issues with the existing intersection. Among them:

  • a narrow median that doesn’t leave sufficient space for long trucks or multiple vehicles to wait in;
  • driver confusion about which drivers entering or exiting the intersection have the right of way;
  • sightline obstructions due to vehicles entering the median from left-turn lanes;
  • faded lines on the roadway;
  • worn rumble strips;
  • deteriorating shoulders;
  • missing or too-short acceleration and deceleration lanes; and
  • inconsistent signage.

At night, lighting was limited, deteriorated pavement markings were hard to see and several signs had low reflectivity.

Naylor said some of these issues have already been rectified, noting that rumble strips were refurbished and new lines were painted in the wake of the crash. New signage was also installed along the Trans-Canada and Highway 5 informing drivers of an upcoming intersection.

She noted, too, that the Department of Transportation and Infrastructure undertook a “standards review” of the intersection immediately after the June crash and confirmed the existing safety features met the department’s standards.

The current median presents a very high risk level and a higher likelihood of collisions, the report said. The gap narrows to between 17 and 20.7 metres at the junction, while some trucks measure 22.7 metres, the study found.

The report said the existing design may limit a driver’s ability to properly assess gaps in traffic and the speed of approaching traffic while crossing Highway 1 on Highway 5.

TIM SMITH / BRANDON SUN Dauphin Mayor David Bosiak listens as Manitoba Premier Wab Kinew speaks during a press conference at the Parkland Recreation Complex in Dauphin on Monday.
TIM SMITH / BRANDON SUN

Dauphin Mayor David Bosiak listens as Manitoba Premier Wab Kinew speaks during a press conference at the Parkland Recreation Complex in Dauphin on Monday.

Human error was cited in many of the 29 collisions reported at the crossing between 2012 and 2021, according to the consultant’s review.

Contributing factors included drivers failing to yield the right-of-way or leaving a stop sign before it was safe to do so.

The majority of the crashes involved vehicles leaving the median.

Other recommendations in the report include more advance warning for drivers approaching the junction and a speed-reduction zone on Highway 5. It said the effectiveness of existing speed-reduction zones on Highway 1 may be limited.

The study also found the intersections of a parallel service road are too close to the junction of Highways 1 and 5.

An RCMP officer walks around the semi-truck involved in a deadly collision a small bus at the corner of Highway 5 and the Trans-Canada Highway near Carberry on Thursday afternoon. (Matt Goerzen/The Brandon Sun)

An RCMP officer walks around the semi-truck involved in a deadly collision a small bus at the corner of Highway 5 and the Trans-Canada Highway near Carberry on Thursday afternoon. (Matt Goerzen/The Brandon Sun)

The circumstances that led to the June crash that garnered international headlines still remain unclear. The province’s review did not examine details of the incident.

Intersection safety review nets
medium-, long-term options

The findings of an external safety review of the Carberry-area intersection where a fiery crash killed 17 seniors were made public Monday.

The Manitoba government is considering three medium-term options to redesign the junction of the Trans-Canada Highway and Highway 5 in a bid to save lives and prevent injuries.

Here are some of the highlights of a consultant’s final report and the province’s announcement:

The findings of an external safety review of the Carberry-area intersection where a fiery crash killed 17 seniors were made public Monday.

The Manitoba government is considering three medium-term options to redesign the junction of the Trans-Canada Highway and Highway 5 in a bid to save lives and prevent injuries.

Here are some of the highlights of a consultant’s final report and the province’s announcement:

  • The three options to be considered during a functional design study are a wider median, a roundabout and a reduced collision U-turn (RCUT) intersection which limits left turns and prevents vehicles from crossing all lanes of traffic.
  • Premier Wab Kinew said the study will determine the safest option.
  • Construction is expected to begin around the end of 2025 and finish in 2026, said Transportation and Infrastructure Minister Lisa Naylor.
  • The initial cost of the project is $12 million, all in provincial funding. The study is expected to produce a revised cost.
  • Looking long-term, Manitoba plans to build an interchange at the site. Engineers gave a timeline of 20-25 years, said Kinew. An interchange or overpass would cost more than $100 million, according to the province.
  • In response to the June 15, 2023, crash, immediate improvements included refurbished rumble strips, the repainting of pavement markings and improved signage.
  • Traffic signals and a reduced speed limit were ruled out because they could increase safety risks or lead to more crashes, the report found.
  • The report pointed to concerns about the narrow width of the median between the Trans-Canada’s lanes, driver behaviour and risks associated with left-hand turns. The median isn’t wide enough to accommodate longer transport trucks. There is little contrast between the Trans-Canada’s mainline lanes and the junction.
  • There were 29 reports of collisions — one of them fatal — at the intersection between 2012 and 2021, although data may be incomplete due to a reporting process change. The main contributing factors included drivers failing to yield to the right-of-way or leaving one of the stop signs on Highway 5 before it was safe to do so.
  • Passenger vehicles were involved in almost three-quarters of the crashes. Four collisions involved tractor-trailers.
  • For drivers in the median, the intersection’s current design may limit the ability to properly assess gaps in traffic and the speed of approaching traffic on Highway 1, the report said.
  • External and internal reviews took place after the collision. The external review was conducted by engineers from WSP Canada Inc.
  • Officials said the Manitoba government is looking at other intersections with similar safety concerns.
  • Permanent memorials will be set up near the intersection and in Dauphin.
  • The Quality Care Transit minibus driver and passengers were from in and around the western Manitoba city. They were on their way to a casino near Carberry, when the southbound bus crossed into the path of an eastbound tractor-trailer that had the right-of-way on the Trans-Canada, police have said.

— Free Press staff

RCMP continue to investigate the crash. What is known is that a southbound mini-bus carrying 25 people, mostly seniors who were en route to a casino, collided with an eastbound semi-truck just before noon on June 15. RCMP have said video footage shows the semi had the right of way.

While the report released Monday specifically focused on one intersection, there are many similar intersections throughout the province.

The province announced the creation of a permanent “specialized safety unit” within the Department of Transportation and Infrastructure to review the entire provincial highway network. The review will look at the network as a whole and determine where updating and modernizing is needed. The unit’s review will include analysis of data and information from policing agencies, Manitoba Public Insurance and academics.

Kinew said the recent safety review will offer a “template” for possible changes at other intersections. He did not identify any specific intersections the unit might tackle first.

Meanwhile, community members are planning to establish a memorial in Dauphin and one at the intersection near Carberry. The province will offer grant money for the initiatives, he said.

with files from Chris Kitching

katrina.clarke@freepress.mb.ca

Road safety review

Katrina Clarke

Katrina Clarke
Investigative reporter

Katrina Clarke is an investigative reporter at the Winnipeg Free Press. Katrina holds a bachelor’s degree in politics from Queen’s University and a master’s degree in journalism from Western University. She has worked at newspapers across Canada, including the National Post and the Toronto Star. She joined the Free Press in 2022. Read more about Katrina.

Every piece of reporting Katrina 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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History

Updated on Monday, January 8, 2024 1:50 PM CST: Updated with quotes

Updated on Monday, January 8, 2024 4:32 PM CST: Updated with more quotes, details

Updated on Monday, January 8, 2024 5:20 PM CST: Adds fact box

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