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48 hours later: Ottawa bus riders reflect on deadly crash

OTTAWA – It was exactly 8:48 a.m. and everyone on the bus knew it.

The Ottawa city bus, OC Transpo route 94 Millennium, was halted at the same rail crossing where just 48 hours earlier a double-decker bus – the 76 – inexplicably failed to stop and hit a train, killing six people.

Read more: What we know about the victims in the Ottawa bus crash

Watch: POV video on Bus 76 as it returns to route and passes by scene of crash

On this morning, the normal chatter of a morning commute was hushed into an impromptu moment of silence as passengers saw the flashing red warning lights.

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The safety barricade that was ripped off its hinges in the crash Wednesday had been replaced by a new one and was lowered into position across the road.

A westbound Via Rail train pulling four passenger cars crawled toward the crossing and then stopped to let a young man in an orange safety vest climb out.

Sept. 20, 2013: A Via Rail train moves past a memorial set up for the victims of Wednesday’s deadly crash involving an Ottawa city bus and Via train. (Photo credit: Bryan Mullan, Global News). Bryan Mullan, Global News

He walked slowly across the two roadways that intersect the tracks and then signalled the all clear to the locomotive, the first to pass this way since the deadly accident.

Some passengers bowed their heads. Some watched the passing train. Others stared out side windows at bouquets of flowers that had been gingerly placed on the gravel along the transitway as a makeshift memorial.

Watch: First train departs Fallowfield station on Sept. 20

As the train crept past buses parked on both sides of the barricades, Germaine Easita wiped a tear from her cheek.

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A government employee who rides this route every day – sometimes on the 76 bus – Easita contemplated the moment.

“It’s horrible, thinking about all those people who died on this spot,” she said, her eyes focused on the passing train.

“I am still wondering how it happened.”

Read more: Friends remember artsy, ‘gentle spirit’ Karen Krzyzewski who died in Ottawa bus crash

Investigators say it could take months to answer that, and they will be using information from data recorders on the vehicles involved. That will include the “black box” recovered from the Via Rail train seen here:

For now, work crews continued to clean up debris from the crash site and repair the tracks that were left bent by the train that was shoved off the rails in the collision.

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Read more: Ottawa bus crash: Investigators recover data recorders

And transit riders continued to ask questions and make suggestions to make their commute safer.

“All the drivers are stressed and they are overworked,” Stephanie Brien complained.

“It’s too hectic and the buses are too full.”

Brien suggested that investigators should look at what the shifts were like for Dave Woodard, the driver who was killed in Wednesday’s fateful crash.

“Was he too stressed? Had he done too many 12-hour shifts over too many days?” Brien wondered.

Other passengers, who didn’t want to be named, suggested that city buses be forced to stop further back from the train tracks.

Craig Watson, bus union president, told Global News that members are setting up a memorial fund for Woodard’s family.

“It’s something that we’re always going to remember,” said the president of Amalgamated Transit Union Local 279.

He said that at this point, speculation about what caused the accident is not helpful.

“I’m hearing tons of rumours. I’ve had many operators call me with ideas of what they thought it would be,” he said. “The reality is this is going to take a proper investigation.”

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Watson said there have been no documented issues with brakes on the bus, but there were problems with condensation and air circulation that have been fixed.

Watch: Union president talks moving on from the tragedy in Ottawa

As the final train car cleared the intersection and the barriers lifted, bus drivers on both sides of the track hesitated momentarily, but then pressed their gas pedals to move on.

As the buses passed, the drivers waved to each other, the 94 driver visibly sombre.

“I’ll never forget it,” he said. “Never.”

With files from Global News reporter Laura Stone

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