Menu

Topics

Connect

Comments

Want to discuss? Please read our Commenting Policy first.

Manitoba eyes three options to improve intersection where crash killed 17

RELATED: A group of Carberry residents say they are opposing planned safety measures at a deadly intersection, arguing provincial consultants didn’t listen to what the community wanted at the site. Katherine Dornian reports. – May 22, 2025

The Manitoba government is moving closer to changing a highway intersection where a bus crash killed 17 people, but there is controversy over the plan.

Story continues below advertisement

The province is holding an open house tonight in Carberry, west of Winnipeg, not far from where a minibus carrying 24 seniors tried to cross the Trans-Canada Highway and was struck by a semi-trailer in 2023.

The province has discussed three options: widening the median, turning the intersection into a roundabout, or banning left turns onto the highway, which would force people to turn right before making a U-turn.

A meeting notice says the preferred option is to be presented at the meeting, and some area residents say the province has been pushing the third alternative, known as a R-cut.

Carberry Mayor Ray Muirhead says he still wants an overpass built — an option the government has said it’s not considering.

No charges were laid in the bus crash, as police said they could not prove the bus driver’s actions that day rose to the level of being criminal.

Advertisement
Advertisement

You are viewing an Accelerated Mobile Webpage.

View Original Article