Wednesday, January 12, 2011

Bathurst Mother Asks Federal and Provincial Governments to Implement Recommendations from Coroners Inquest: Ban 15 passenger vans, use pro drivers


Three years ago on January 12, 2008, my son Daniel and seven others were killed in a tragic passenger van collision just outside of Bathurst, New Brunswick. Known as the Boys in Red, their deaths have come to symbolize the failure of the student transportation system in New Brunswick and across Canada.

As a mother, I will always mourn the death of my son Daniel and his fellow Bathurst High School Phantoms basketball team members whose lives were taken three years ago today. They paid the price for the system’s failure and as the May 2009 Coroners Inquest into the death of our sons revealed, so many people with the power and authority to change the course of events that night failed to do their duty and seven dead children were the result.

As mothers we have overcome many obstacles – personal and emotional - in the last three years to bring awareness to the issues of student transportation safety so that our sons deaths were not in vain. Before this happened, I was just an ordinary person. I had never spoken to the media in my life and I didn’t concern myself with politics. I was a just a mother. So it is not easy for me to speak out in the media but I do it because I know I have to, not only for my son Daniel but for all students in the future so that they may be safe. And I know that if Daniel was alive, he would support what I am doing. I also know that if my son had not been in a 15 passenger van that night three years ago, if he had been in a Multi Function Activity Bus (MFAB) driven by a professional Class 2 Yellow School Bus driver, we would be talking about something very different today because he and six young boys would be alive.

On Monday, we were advised by the NB Minister of Education, Jody Carr, that a stakeholders' committee on student transportation will be struck in New Brunswick. While I am pleased to know that the province has made this commitment, it means nothing if students are still driven to extra-curricular events by volunteers who are not qualified to handle these large Multi Function Activity Buses. We do not ask volunteers to drive Yellow School Buses and we should not be asking them to drive MFABs.

So today, on the third anniversary of their deaths, I am sending out this message to the Premier of New Brunswick, David Alward, the Minister of Education Jody Carr, the Minister of Transportation, Claude Williams and the Minster of Public Safety, Robert Trevors, imploring them to implement recommendation #6 from the Coroners Inquest into the death of our sons.

Recommendation #6: Nothing less than qualified, class 2 yellow school bus driver(s) with endorsements B (valid for school buses) and E (valid for air brakes) for all student travel to off-site extra-curricular events. Teachers, coaches and parents, as well as volunteers should not be driving to children to off-site extra-curricular events.

I am also asking Chuck Strahl, the Federal Minister of Transport, Infrastructure and Communities, to implement recommendation #8 from the Coroners Inquest:

Recommendation #8: Fifteen passenger and seven passenger vans banned for student travel across Canada. Only yellow school buses and multi function activity buses (MFABs) should be used.

We are expecting Minister Strahl to soon release the results of 15 passenger van safety review that was promised in June by his predecessor, John Baird, and to which Minister Strahl committed to examining a national consensus on student transportation safety in September, 2010 in Halifax at the Council of Ministers meeting.

I believe that with the release of this report, Transport Canada will come to no other conclusion but that 15 passenger vans must be banned for transporting students and children in every province across Canada.

Finally, I want to make it clear that I will never give up lobbying for safe student transportation and I will not go away until the last recommendation from the Coroners Inquest into the death of our sons are implemented. I owe it to my son Daniel and all the other Boys in Red to keep up the fight until 15 passenger vans are banned for student use across Canada and nothing less than qualified, Class 2 licensed Yellow School Bus Drivers are behind the wheels of Multi-Function Activity Buses.

Tuesday, January 11, 2011

Candlelight Vigil at Dusk, January 11, 2011

Candles are lit at the site of the Boys in Red tragedy on the one year anniversary, January 12, 2009.

A candleight vigil will be held starting at dusk at the crash site on Route 8 to mark the third anniversary of the Boys in Red tragedy.

Monday, January 10, 2011

YouTube Interview with Isabelle Hains on 3rd anniversary of Boys in Red Tragedy

Interview with Isabelle Hains on the third anniversary of the Boys in Red Tragedy. Isabelle discusses the three most important issues facing student transportation safety today, 1) the banning of 15 passenger vans across Canada, 2) the use of Multi Function Activity Buses and 3) nothing less than professional Class 2 bus drivers behind the wheels of MFABs.

Part 1 (8:10 minutes)



Part 2 (6:30 minutes)



Part 3 (7:12 minutes)



Part 4 (8:20 minutes)

Sunday, January 9, 2011

Radio Canada TeleJournal Acadie "Boulons mals vissés"

YouTube Isabelle Hains Radio Interview UNB's CHSR-FM "Lunch Box" programme with Tim Raynes

On December 3, 2010 Isabelle Hains did an interview with Tim Raynes of the University of New Brunswick's CHSR-FM "Lunch Box" radio program during which they discussed Hains' recent meeting with New Brunswick Minister of Education, Jody Carr on December 1, 2010 in Fredericton.

Part 1 (6 minutes)



Part 2 (11 minutes)



Part 3 (3.47 minutes)

Saturday, January 8, 2011

Telegraph Journal: Mother of Bathurst crash victim says she's sick of playing waiting game

L-R: Delalene Harris-Foran, President CUPE 1253 and Isabelle Hains, mother of one of seven Bathurst High School students killed in a school van crash three years ago, answer questions during a press conference held December 1, 2010 at the Crowne Plaza in Fredericton. Photo by Shawn Berry
H5 Jeremy Trevors, Miramichi Leader

FREDERICTON - After nearly three years of waiting and with a close call last month, Delalene Harris Foran and Isabelle Hains are sick of playing a waiting game.

Click here to read original article in the Telegraph Journal.

Harris Foran, who is the president of the New Brunswick Council of School District Unions (CUPE 1253), is waiting for Education Minister Jody Carr to commit to introducing a coroner's inquest recommendation that only Class 2-B drivers transport children to extra-curricular activities.

The issue arose after a multi-function activity bus from Dalhousie was taking the École Aux Quatre Vents boys' hockey team from Miramichi back to Dalhousie Dec. 11. After the game, the bus wasn't handling properly. The driver, who trains others to drive school buses, inspected the bus just outside Beresford and discovered nuts were loose on the back wheels.

"I was kind of shocked," Harris Foran said.

"If it might have been a volunteer they may have thought it was the road or 'we're not used to driving vehicles like that.'"

She was glad the driver took the action he did and prevented an accident from occurring.

The driver did an inspection before leaving Dalhousie for Miramichi but found nothing wrong. The bus had been inspected on Nov. 30 and had new tires installed.

"We're checking up on it to see why [the bus] never went back to get the tires re-torqued," she said.

Hains has pushed to get bus rules in place since her son Daniel and six other members of the Bathurst High School Phantoms basketball team died when their passenger van collided with a transport truck in January 2008. "I feel this is very important that we have a professional driver driving the vehicle because it is a bus," Hains said.

"The government, I feel, has not taken the responsibility and their obligation to the students in the school system and given the responsibility to volunteers, when you wouldn't have volunteers driving the yellow school bus during the day," Hains explained.

Since the death of her son, Hains has had to deal with three different education ministers.

"Each minister, every time, we have to go through the whole cycle with them and give our concerns, it just seems like it takes...I don't know what it is with the government," she said, her frustration becoming apparent as she spoke through tears.

"When will the government open their eyes and see what they really need in protecting our children? And how far will they go to ignore everything that has been laid out in front of them?"

Hains is hoping after three years of fighting, new safety rules will be introduced.

"I hope that our government will put in place all the recommendations to keep the children safe."

Click here to read original article in the Telegraph Journal.

Wednesday, January 5, 2011

NB Minister of Public Safety Says Laying Charges Against Sackville Bus Company "Inappropriate"

The following is a statement from Isabelle Hains of Bathurst, NB in response to a letter received late today from New Brunswick Public Safety Minister, Robert Trevors, regarding the failure to lay charges against Prestige Bus Service of Sackville. (See original correspondence below).

"As we suspected, there will be no charges laid by the New Brunswick Department of Public Safety in the Sackville Prestige Bus Service incident where 60 children from Marshview Middle School were driven to Halifax on two separate charter buses with bald tires in late November, 2010.

Citing "precedent" the Minister of Public Safety, Robert Trevors, has declined to lay charges because Nova Scotia has already laid charges in the incident. According to Minister Trevors, proper procedures and policies were followed and the investigating officers "concluded that further charges for the same violations would be without precedent, and inappropriate."

We'll tell you what's inappropriate: it's inappropriate that three years after the Boys in Red tragedy, students in the province of New Brunswick are still being transported in buses with bald tires in winter and the crime goes unpunished.

Nobody at the Department of Education paid a price for this incident either as employees there also followed proper "policy", according to the Minister of Education, Jody Carr. To quote: "I am satisfied that appropriate policies were followed by District 2 and Marshview Middle School to ensure student safety while on an out-of-province field trip," Carr said on December 3.

We say that any time childrens' lives are endangered by unsafe transportation practices and policies of the Department of Education that precedents MUST be set to prevent it from happening again. In 2009, Brice Noel, a volunteer coach / bus driver from Jacquet River was charged and fined $172 by the Department of Public Safety for failing to keep a log of his pre-trip inspection. We assumed that the actions of Prestige Bus Service of Sackville warranted similar, if not more severe treatment, given the number of buses and children involved.

Apparently, the Boys in Red tragedy wasn't enough to set precedent. Almost three years to the day and the people with the power and authority to improve student transportation safety haven't learned a thing. Prestige Bus Services and the senior administrators at District 2 didn't even get a slap on the wrist. Laws, policies, rules and regulations can be violated and nobody is held accountable. It's shameful and borders on criminal endangerment because the message is clear: in New Brunswick, it's all right to transport children in winter on buses with bald tires.

Meantime, we are still waiting for word from the Minister of Education, Jody Carr, regarding his proposed student transportation stakeholders "committee" which was raised in our December 1, 2010 meeting in Fredericton. With the 3rd anniversary of the Boys in Red Tragedy just days away, we believe the Minister of Education must show good faith and strike the committee with a view to dealing with the concerns and issues of safe student transportation without any further delay."

- 30 -

For further information, contact:

Isabelle Hains

_______________

From: "Trevors, Hon. Robert (DPS/MSP)"
Sent: Wednesday, January 05, 2011 4:13 PM
To: "info@vanangels.ca"
Subject: RE: Isabelle Hains question about charge under Motor Vehicle Act and MVI stations in NB

Dear Ms. Hains:

Thank you for your e-mail regarding Prestige Bus Service of Sackville, NB.

The incident on November 24th, 2010 in Nova Scotia has resulted in charges in Nova Scotia that are before the courts. It also led to an investigation in New Brunswick, which has now concluded. Our officers have concluded that the case has reached its proper conclusion. The buses were pulled over, violations were discovered and documented, charges were laid, and the buses ordered out of service until the violations remedied. Had the buses been intercepted in New Brunswick rather than in Nova Scotia, they would have been subject to inspection on the same standards, and the same charges laid. The officers have concluded that further charges for the same violations would be without precedent, and inappropriate.

The Department has four employees with the title of “Motor Vehicle Inspector”, their primary responsibility is the inspection of licensed motor vehicle inspection stations. There are approximately fourteen hundred motor vehicle safety inspection stations licensed throughout the province. It is important to note that the inspection of buses and other commercial vehicles is undertaken by carriers and their employees daily, as well as by qualified mechanics at inspection stations at least twice annually and by Commercial Vehicle Enforcement officers on a random basis. We have fifty-eight Commercial Vehicle Enforcement Officers carrying out these duties throughout the province. A team of four National Safety Code auditors complements the highway safety efforts of Motor Vehicle Inspectors and Commercial Vehicle Enforcement Officers by auditing the records of carriers.

The Department of Public Safety also has twenty-three compliance officers who conduct inspections under the Liquor Control Act, the Motor Vehicle Act, the Gaming Control Act, the Smoke-free Places Act, the Tobacco Sales Act, the Salvage Dealers Licencing Act, the Film and Video Act, and the Private Investigators and Security Services Act.

I appreciate the time you have taken to provide your observations and insight regarding safety particularly as it applies to students travelling on our highways. Highway safety is a priority for our Government and I appreciate the time you have taken to point out potential safety problems.

Yours truly,

Hon. Robert B. Trevors

Minister of Public Safety and Solicitor General

_______________________


From: info@vanangels.ca [mailto:info@vanangels.ca]
Sent: November 29, 2010 4:11 PM
To: Trevors, Hon. Robert (DPS/MSP)
Cc: Williams, Claude (Hon.) (DOT/MDT); Alward, David Hon. (PO/CPM); Johnstone, David (DOT/MDT); delalene@nbnet.nb.ca; Carr, Hon. Jody (ED); Leger, Marc (DPS/MSP) - DM/SM; O'Donnell, Charles (DPS/MSP); Doucet, Roger (ED); info@vanangels.ca
Subject: Isabelle Hains question about charge under Motor Vehicle Act and MVI stations in NB

Hon. Robert Trevors
Minister of Public Safety
Argyle Place
P. O. Box 6000
Fredericton, NB
E3B 5H1

November 29, 2010

Hon. Mr. Trevors:

I am writing to ask whether you intend to lay a charge under the Motor Vehicle Act against Prestige Bus Service of Sackville, NB for its failure to comply with the Act.

Specifically, I am referring to the incident last Wednesday, November 24, 2010, when Prestige Bus Service knowingly drove 60 students from Marshview Middle School in Sackville, NB 298 kms to Halifax, NS with bald tires. In 2009, Brice Noel, a volunteer coach / bus driver from Jacquet River was charged and fined $172 by the Department of Public Safety for failing to keep a log of his pre-trip inspection. I assume that the actions of Prestige Bus Service of Sackville warrant similar, if not more severe treatment, given the number of buses and children involved.

Second, I understand that there are four Motor Vehicle Inspectors employed by the Department of Public Safety for the entire province of New Brunswick. I am writing therefore to ask how many licensed Motor Vehicle Inspection stations there are in the province?

Third, I would like to know how many Liquor Inspectors there are in the employ of the Department of Public Safety?

Thank you for taking the time to answer my questions and I look forward to your response.

Yours sincerely,


Isabelle Hains
info@vanangels.ca

cc.

Hon. David Alward, Premier
Hon. Claude Williams, Minister, New Brunswick Department of Transportation and Infrastructure
Hon. Jody Carr, Minister, NB Department of Education
David J. Johnstone, Deputy Minister, NB Department of Transportation and Infrastructure
Marc Leger, Deputy Minister, NB Department of Public Safety
Roger Doucet, Deputy Minister, NB Department of Education
Charles O'Donnell, Registrar of Motor Vehicles, Dept. of Public Safety
Delalene Harris-Foran, President, CUPE 1253