Home NEWS In wake of London, Ont.-area crash that killed 5, municipality looking at...

In wake of London, Ont.-area crash that killed 5, municipality looking at safety upgrades

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Call for more visible stop signs on rural roads after teacher, 4 students killed heading to Walkerton.
By: Andrew Lupton · CBC News
Local councilors are calling for safety improvements at an intersection outside London, Ont., after four high school students and a teacher died following a crash on Friday. Hundreds mourn at Walkerton, Ont., school vigil for teacher, students killed in crash A motion considered at this evening’s Thames Centre council meeting calls on the upper-tier municipalities of Middlesex and Oxford to conduct a traffic and roadway study of the intersection once the ongoing OPP investigation wraps up.
Councilors voted unanimously in favor of the motion. It was at the intersection, at about 4:30 p.m. ET on Friday, that four high school students — aged 16 to 17 — and their 33-year-old teacher died after the SUV they were riding in collided with a transport truck. Following the initial collision, the SUV was then struck by a second SUV. Three of the five died at the scene and the two others died in hospital.
The driver of the transport truck and two people in the other SUV suffered minor injuries. The students and teacher were on their way home to Walkerton — two hours away — after competing in a high school softball tournament in Dorchester, just east of London. The students have been identified as Olivia Rourke, Rowan McLeod, Kaydance Ford and Danica Baker. Their teacher was Matt Eckert. The tragedy has prompted an outpouring of support. Friends and family members held a vigil Sunday in Walkerton.
Thames Centre Coun. Thomas Heeman is backing a motion that calls on the upper-tier municipalities of Middlesex Centre and Oxford County to consider undertaking a traffic study of the intersection to find ways to improve its safety.
“We haven’t seen a loss of life this significant in some time,” said Heeman. “I think the council wants to indicate that we want to work in partnership with the county … on whatever can be done to learn from this situation and prevent such an incident in the future.”
Cobble Hills Road is two lanes and runs north-south. Drivers on Cobble Hills come to a stop sign at the intersection of the busier Thorndale Road… Source: cbc.ca/news

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