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To: Elroy Jetson who wrote (141027)7/6/2018 6:14:33 PM
From: James Seagrove  Respond to of 217901
 
Driver of semi in Humboldt Broncos bus crash faces 29 charges

16 people died and 13 others were injured when bus and truck collided on highway

Creeden Martell · CBC News · Posted: Jul 06, 2018 11:29 AM CT | Last Updated: an hour ago



Jaskirat Singh Sidhu is facing 16 counts of dangerous operation of a motor vehicle causing death and 13 counts of dangerous operation of motor vehicle causing bodily injury. (Facebook)

The driver of the tractor-trailer that collided with the Humboldt Broncos team bus has been arrested and charged, RCMP announced on Friday.

Truck driver Jaskirat Singh Sidhu, 29, is facing 16 counts of dangerous operation of a motor vehicle causing death and 13 counts of dangerous operation of motor vehicle causing bodily injury.

He was arrested at his home in Calgary on Friday morning and remanded into custody. Sidhu is set to appear in court in Saskatchewan next week, but no date has been set.

Convictions for dangerous operation of a vehicle causing death can result in a sentence of up to 14 years in prison, while a conviction for injuring someone could land someone in prison for 10 years."Whatever happened, happened for a reason," said crash survivor and former Bronco Ryan Straschnitzki. "His intention wasn't to go out and hurt us that day, but that mistake is obviously going to change his life and changed all our lives."

The Humboldt Broncos released a statement Friday afternoon thanking the RCMP and its investigators for their work.

"Our organization has faith in the justice system and we will be watching closely as this court process plays out," the statement read. "Our primary focus continues to be supporting the survivors, families and others that were directly impacted by the tragedy on April 6."

Sidhu was working for the Calgary-based Adesh Deol Trucking Ltd. when the crash occurred at a rural intersection.

He was driving west on Highway 335 in a semi as a Charlie's Charters bus carrying the Humboldt Broncos was northbound on Highway 35 to an SJHL playoff game in Nipawin, Sask.

The team bus was travelling northbound on Highway 35. The semi-trailer was coming from the east on Highway 335. The semi had a stop sign and the bus did not. (CBC )The bus had the right of way. There is a flashing stop sign for drivers on Highway 335 at Highway 35 between Nipawin and Tisdale. The RCMP said the semi was in the intersection when the vehicles collided.

Sidhu was briefly detained after the April 6 collision then released. He was uninjured.

"I know it has been difficult for many to await the outcome of this police investigation," said Curtis Zablocki, Saskatchewan RCMP commanding officer and assistant commissioner, noting the three-month timeline. "The time it took to do this work — this important work — was necessary."

The Canadian Trucking Alliance said in a statement Friday that once the facts of the case are known, it will work with the provinces and the federal government to improve commercial vehicle safety.

The statement also said the CTA would like to see the results of the investigation into the trucking company that employed Sidhu.

What we know about Sidhu

Sidhu worked for the trucking company for a month prior to the fatal collision, according to owner Sukhmander Singh. Singh said Sidhu trained with him for two weeks and was driving on his own for two more weeks before the crash.

Although Sidhu was not injured in the crash, he did receive trauma counselling in the aftermath.

Sidhu was a bachelor of commerce student at Panjab University in Chandigarh, India, from 2008 until 2012, according to his LinkedIn profile.

He made his way to Calgary on a student visa in 2013 to study for a diploma in business administration at Bow Valley College from 2014 until 2015.

Sidhu's lawyer declined to comment on his client.

The Saskatchewan Junior Hockey League's Humboldt Broncos were heading to Nipawin for a playoff game when the collision occurred.

Ten Broncos players died. The six other deaths included the bus driver, an athletic therapist, the head coach, assistant coach and two employees of Humboldt's FM radio station.



Ten members of the Broncos died in the crash. The six other deaths included the bus driver, an athletic therapist, the head coach, assistant coach and two employees of Humboldt's FM radio station. (CBC)



To: Elroy Jetson who wrote (141027)10/11/2024 9:18:59 AM
From: Maple MAGA 1 Recommendation

Recommended By
longz

  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 217901
 
Hidden camera, internal memo reveal how unqualified truck drivers are getting onto Canada's roads

Memo reveals bribes, forged documents at Ontario’s DriveTest centres

Jenny Cowley, Greg Sadler, Asha Tomlinson · CBC News ·

Posted: Oct 11, 2024 2:00 AM MDT | Last Updated: 5 hours ago



Marketplace went undercover to truck school training yards to hear what instructors would reveal about their training practices. (CBC)

The system for testing truck drivers in Ontario has been compromised by bribes, forged documents and rigged testing, says a memo leaked to CBC's Marketplace by an industry insider.

A subsequent hidden camera investigation by Marketplace reveals that the training students get ahead of that test can be just as problematic.

Ontario's DriveTest centres are managed by a company called Serco, which oversees operations and logistics for a variety of organizations, ranging from air traffic control for the Canadian Armed Forces to employment services for the federal government.

The leaked internal memo, which was shared with Marketplace following an investigation into driving schools, was addressed to all driving examiners in Ontario. It reveals "a number of employees have either resigned or been terminated this past year due to investigations that we have completed involving allegations of inappropriate and illegal behaviour."

  • Watch the season premiere of Marketplace, "Truckload of Trouble," Friday at 8 p.m., 8:30 p.m. in Newfoundland, on CBC-TV and anytime on YouTube or CBC Gem.
This behaviour ranges from examiners "accepting bribes for issuing road test passes, to manipulation of automatic versus manual transmission certificates, to false driver experience being added to driver records," according to the memo.

The memo, dated November 2023, was signed by Gary Cook, Serco's vice-president of operations.

It was shared with Marketplace by Kiera Dubois, a DriveTest examiner responsible for testing people who want to obtain their commercial trucking licence.

"[I'm] basically putting my job on the line to say something," she told Marketplace. CBC has agreed to change her name and conceal her identity because she fears losing her job for speaking out.

Dubois wasn't shocked by the memo. She's been hearing about bribery for years, and has even had people "float" the idea of bribing her for a pass.

"These people [who] took bribes gave licences for a murder weapon … in any accident of a transport versus a car, more than likely the person in that car is not going to walk away."





Kiera Dubois, whose real identity CBC is withholding, leaked an internal memo about bribes and manipulation of documents taking place at Ontario DriveTest centres. (CBC)

After nearly two decades of working for Serco, she feels the company values performance metrics and customer service over ensuring adequately trained drivers are getting their licence.

"In our company, there are times where we feel that someone shouldn't be passing and we have to pass them … Our hands are tied."

Marketplace requested an interview with Serco, which the company declined. In an email statement, spokesperson Alan Hill wrote that "Serco operates under the strict testing standards set by the Ministry of Transportation. Our aim is to provide a full and fair assessment of each driver's skills, while ensuring that the road test reflects the applicant's overall competency."

In response to the leaked memo, Hill wrote that the company takes allegations seriously, and immediately launched an investigation resulting in the termination of those involved in any fraudulent or illegal behaviour.

What is MELT?Before becoming eligible for their road test in Ontario, prospective truckers must complete "mandatory entry-level training," or MELT. The training was introduced in Ontario in 2017 and has since been introduced in the majority of other provinces in Canada, plus the Northwest Territories.

In Ontario, MELT consists of at least 103.5 hours of training, including 32 hours on the road, 18 hours of backing-up training, 17 hours of in-yard training and 36.5 hours of in-classroom theory.

Dubois is one of the examiners responsible for testing people trying to get their AZ licence, which allows them to drive a commercial tractor-trailer over 10,000 pounds with air brakes.

She says not everyone she tests appears to have completed the MELT program, which prompted Marketplace to dig deeper into what is happening at truck training schools.

WATCH | Marketplace's previous story on car driving schools:



Driving Schools Exposed: Who's been cheating the system?

We expose how driving schools are willing to cheat the system to get your money, selling beginner driver education certificates to students who’ve had no training – putting public safety at risk.
Hundreds of private career colleges offer MELT training, with a particular boom following the COVID-19 pandemic.

At public colleges such as Fanshawe College and Humber in Ontario, MELT can cost upwards of $10,000. But Marketplace found many private career colleges offer training for $3,500-$5,000.

The cost is what attracted Ibrahim Manish to Smart Truck Training Academy.

"In hindsight, obviously that ended up being a pretty huge mistake," he said. CBC has agreed to change his name because he fears speaking out will cost him employment opportunities.

"I can just count on one hand the number of times I was taken out on the road," he said.





Ibrahim Manish practises inspecting a truck prior to a road test for his AZ licence. (CBC)

For his in-yard instruction, Manish says he had to rely on YouTube videos and notes from other students to learn how to inspect a truck to ensure it's safe to be on the road.

In the few hours he did get on the road, Manish said there was often a second student in the truck along with him and the instructor, sitting on a foldable lawn chair with no seatbelt.

"I was like, how is this allowed? Like, how is this legal?"


Partway through his program, Smart Truck Training Academy suddenly shut down, leaving instructors unpaid and students out thousands of dollars. Despite the fact that Manish did not complete his 103.5 hours of training, a manager from Smart Truck Training Academy agreed to tell the Ministry of Transportation he had, making him eligible for the road test.

Marketplace attempted to reach the owner of Smart Truck Training Academy multiple times but got no response, and learned they have left Canada.

Manish ended up paying thousands in additional training at other schools, as well as to use their trucks to pass his road test. After multiple attempts, he is now a full AZ licence holder. He says he's looking for his first job with a carrier that offers extra training for new hires.

Hidden camera captures schools taking shortcutsA CBC journalist, posing as a prospective student, walked into five truck school training yards with hidden cameras to document what instructors would tell prospective students.

At one school, an instructor implied students can take their road test before the mandatory 103.5 hours is completed. "The hours don't matter," he said. "It is our responsibility to get you ready for the road test. Maybe you will be ready in 90 hours or 30 to 40."

At other schools, Marketplace spoke with students who had not completed any in-class lessons, and had no idea they had to. Instructors confirmed to the undercover journalist that they wouldn't need any in-class lessons.

Other instructors said they would teach all theory in the yard, despite MELT rules stating it must be taught in a separate classroom environment.





Marketplace went undercover into five truck training practice yards to see what the schools would tell prospective students about MELT training. (CBC)

The schools Marketplace visited also said that students would be trained according to what each DriveTest location tends to ask for during a road test. This is a big red flag, says Matt Richardson, vice-president at KRTS Transportation Specialists Inc, one of the oldest truck training schools in Ontario.

"You're now working off memory, so you may not actually know how to safely and successfully operate the unit in a number of different scenarios that you could encounter on a daily basis," he said.

One school broke it down by city: "Suppose you have a test in Peterborough. They do the S-back," said an employee, referring to a technique used to back a truck into a dock. "If you have a test in Orillia or Newmarket, they do the C-back."

In a 2023 report, Ontario's auditor general cautioned against driving schools using this practice, writing "it may undermine the integrity of the driving examination process."

Dubois believes this is how some inadequately trained students are passing their road test.

As well, Dubois says she is told to let some infractions slide during road tests, even if they're breaking traffic laws. For example, if a student rolls through a stop sign or speeds, they won't receive any marks against them unless it happens a second time during a test.

Marketplace has reviewed internal documentation provided to road test examiners that confirms that if a student completes a rolling stop, an examiner should issue a verbal warning and not mark the occurrence on the score sheet.


Serco said that errors are permitted, provided "they do not accumulate more than the defined threshold for a 'pass,' and no illegal or dangerous maneuvers were performed."

Dubois believes some of this leniency is due to the pressure of a passing rate that examiners are expected to stay within. If they stray too far from the average pass rate, they'll be investigated. Having that thought in the back of their minds, says Dubois, could encourage colleagues to pass people they shouldn't.

Serco wrote that they track pass and fail rates to deliver consistent and fair testing across all driver examiners.

Ministry agrees MELT is not effectiveIn 2019, Ontario's auditor general released a report urging the Ministry of Transportation to review the MELT program and increase enforcement for commercial vehicles.

In a 2022 follow-up report, Ontario's Ministry of Transportation responded to the auditor general, saying MELT is "not an effective program" and writing there had been "little evidence of road safety benefit resulting from the July 2017 MELT program."

While the MELT program is governed by the Ministry of Transportation, private career colleges, which offer the majority of truck training schools, are regulated by the Ministry of Colleges and Universities.

Only a handful of investigators are responsible for inspecting and auditing all private career colleges. This includes more than 200 truck training schools, plus 400 other private career colleges, teaching everything from hairdressing to payroll to plumbing. Investigators are expected to be experts in all programs.

Marketplace asked the Ministry of Colleges and Universities why so few resources are dedicated to investigating an increasing number of truck training schools. They declined to speak directly with CBC, but sent a statement saying the ministry has "taken action on bad actors to ensure that all training is done safely and to standard."

It added that "all career colleges are inspected regularly, as well as in response to concerns or complaints the ministry becomes aware of."





Ontario Transportation Minister Prabmeet Sarkaria declined an interview with Marketplace multiple times. (CBC)

Ontario's Minister of Transportation Prabmeet Sarkaria declined an interview request with Marketplace multiple times. Earlier this week at a press conference, he said Ontario has some of the safest roads in North America.

This claim is often repeated by the government. However, a 2021 report from the province's auditor general flags that when looking only at commercial vehicles, Ontario had a higher injury and fatality rate than the rest of Canada.

A 2024 report from the Insurance Bureau of Canada suggests that accident rates are on the rise for commercial vehicles.

When asked about the Serco memo, Sarkaria said his ministry has passed all necessary information to authorities.

With regards to truck training schools and the findings of Marketplace's investigation, he admitted there were "some bad actors out there" and that his ministry will "spare no expense" to enforce the MELT program.

While she waits for the government to take more action, Dubois says she's going to do her best to stop bad drivers from hitting Canadian roads.

Even so, she's still nervous to drive herself. "I avoid highway driving as much as possible. If I can take other roads, I will."

CBC's Journalistic Standards and Practices| About CBC News



To: Elroy Jetson who wrote (141027)5/23/2025 10:32:13 AM
From: Maple MAGA 1 Recommendation

Recommended By
Mick Mørmøny

  Respond to of 217901
 
Paralympics Summer

'Beyond the crash': TV series on former Humboldt Bronco Ryan Straschnitzki set to air

Airdrie, Alta., native was paralyzed from the chest down, is trying to make 2028 Paralympic basketball team

Bill Graveland · The Canadian Press · Posted: May 18, 2025 8:52 AM CST | Last Updated: May 22


Humboldt Broncos bus crash survivor Ryan Straschnitzki tosses a basketball in Airdrie, Alta., on May 14. A film crew with Regina-based Prairie Cat Productions followed Straschnitzki for eight months and created a six-part series called "We Were Broncos." (Jeff McIntosh/The Canadian Press)

Ryan Straschnitzki's life has been an open book since he was seriously injured in the Humboldt Broncos bus crash, and his story is soon to be shown on TV.

The 26-year-old from Airdrie, Alta., was paralyzed from the chest down in 2018, when a semi-trailer ran a stop sign and barrelled into the path of the junior hockey team's bus in rural Saskatchewan.

Sixteen people died and 13 were hurt.

A film crew with Regina-based Prairie Cat Productions followed Straschnitzki for eight months and created a six-part series called "We Were Broncos." It airs on AMI, or Accessible Media Inc., beginning May 26.

Straschnitzki played on Alberta's Para hockey team and had been training with the Paralympic development team, but his journey ended at the Team Canada Olympic tryouts.

WATCH | Ryan Straschnitzki targets LA28 Paralympics:



Humboldt Broncos survivor Ryan Straschnitzki targets LA28 Paralympics

The 26-year-old from Airdrie, Alta., tells host Anastasia Bucsis about his dreams to play wheelchair basketball at LA 2028, as well as why he chose to share his deeply personal story in the upcoming docuseries "We Were Broncos." Plus, he divulges his (controversial!) predictions for the NHL playoffs this year. "We Were Broncos" premiers on AMI and AMI+ starting on May 26, 2025.
In July 2023, he decided to try to make the 2028 Paralympic basketball squad.

The move caught the attention of Lucas Frison, founder of Prairie Cat, who had completed a documentary for CBC on the Bronco team in the season after the crash.

"Looking back, seeing some of the footage and where I was to where I am now is a real eye opener. I think I've changed a lot as a person," Straschnitzki told The Canadian Press while shooting hoops at an outdoor court in Airdrie.

"I think at the beginning of the basketball season I kind of doubted myself a little bit. By the end of the season I was a lot more confident in myself and realized I have the ability to make it where I want to make it, if I put the work in."

Straschnitzki has been playing on a Calgary wheelchair basketball team and was invited to his first camp in July for Team Canada.
Frison, the producer and director for "We Were Broncos," was a close friend of Mark Cross, an assistant coach of the Broncos who died in the crash.

Frison said it's rewarding to tell Straschnitzki's story.

"I've got to know him a lot over this last year, and he's just a fun, positive person to be around."

In the series, Ryan talks about being recognized and approached by people on the street about the crash and his survival, said Frison.

"He understands. He's OK with that. But he also wants to be known for other things, like his pursuit of wheelchair basketball and making the Canadian Paralympic Team for the 2028 Paralympics. He wants to be known for his Straz Strong charity that he started and some of these things that were beyond the crash."

Straschnitzki is set to be in Toronto this week promoting the series.

"I think a lot of people know the story of Humboldt and what happened. But I think a lot of people don't really know my story ... my perspective and where I'm at now," he said.

"I think it will open a lot of eyes and hopefully people get insight into what my life looks like."
Frison and Straschnitzki both said they hope there will be a second season.

Straschnitzki admitted he hasn't seen the finished product.

"I hate watching myself on camera and hearing myself, so I don't know what to expect," he said with a laugh.

"I just hope the audience likes it and it turns out well, then we'll see what happens from there."

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Bill Graveland

Bill Graveland is a Calgary-based reporter for The Canadian Press.