The mayor of Merritt, B.C., wonders why the Okanagan Connector wasn’t closed on Christmas Eve due to severe weather conditions, after a fatal collision on the highway near the city claimed four lives and injured dozens that day.
“I don’t think that highway should have been opened for public transit at that point in time, because it was just far too dangerous.”
The storm left thousands of people in B.C. without power on Dec. 24 and the following days.
Fleming said on Dec. 27 that multiple pieces of heavy equipment were out to maintain the road on the day of the accident, and that there was “low precipitation.” He made the remark during a press conference about the crash.
In a statement on Dec. 27, the B.C. RCMP described the road conditions on Christmas Eve to be “fluid, transitioning from clear wet roads to frozen with ice and snow on the road surface due to the time of day (sun setting) and changing weather conditions.”
Police said the investigation into the incident remains ongoing.
Goetz said there might have been a reluctance to close the highway due to concerns about commerce and keeping the traffic flowing.
“I think sometimes there’s a hesitancy because it’s a commerce highway,” he told CBC. “It moves goods, there’s commerce involved with it. It’s all about keeping the commerce flowing, I think, and sometimes that human safety gets lost in that.”