Sunday, December 28, 2025
ADVT 
National

Collision Between Train And Car Kills Abbotsford Man, Cuts Power

Darpan News Desk Darpan, 08 Nov, 2014 01:34 PM
    ABBOTSFORD, B.C. — A 36-year-old Abbotsford, B.C., man is dead after a train slammed into his car early Saturday.
     
    Const. Ian MacDonald with Abbotsford Police says several train cars were derailed by the collision, which happened just before 3 a.m.
     
    Emergency crews found the wreckage of a Volkswagon Jetta and its driver dead at the scene.
     
    Several hydro poles were also knocked down by the crash, initially cutting power to several thousand customers in the city's east and downtown, though BC Hydro's website showed most electricity restored by early afternoon.
     
    MacDonald says crossings in town are cleared so traffic should resume to normal, though work cleaning up the train continues.
     
    An investigation is underway, but it's too early to say what lead to the collision.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Burnaby Steps Up Fight Against Kinder Morgan Trans Mountain Pipeline

    Burnaby Steps Up Fight Against Kinder Morgan Trans Mountain Pipeline
    VANCOUVER - The mayor of Burnaby, B.C., says his city's lawsuit against Kinder Morgan over the removal of trees during work related to the Trans Mountain pipeline is not a legal tactic designed to stall — and ultimately stop — the project.

    Burnaby Steps Up Fight Against Kinder Morgan Trans Mountain Pipeline

    Christy Clark Addresses First Nations Ruling

    Christy Clark Addresses First Nations Ruling
    VANCOUVER - Premier Christy Clark called a historic meeting between hundreds of British Columbia First Nations' leaders and members of her cabinet a beginning, saying she didn't expect to change history in one day.

    Christy Clark Addresses First Nations Ruling

    Newest national museum set to open in Winnipeg celebrating human rights

    Newest national museum set to open in Winnipeg celebrating human rights
    WINNIPEG - When Canada's newest national museum opens next weekend, it will mark the end of a 14-year journey sparked by one family's desire to have Canadians learn about the struggle for — and the fragility of — freedom.

    Newest national museum set to open in Winnipeg celebrating human rights

    Yea or Nay: Canadians debate Scottish secession, parallels with Quebec

    Yea or Nay: Canadians debate Scottish secession, parallels with Quebec
    VANCOUVER - From Simon Fraser University in Burnaby, B.C., to Cape Breton, N.S., two words — Quebec sovereignty — hover like a spectre over the debate on Scottish independence.

    Yea or Nay: Canadians debate Scottish secession, parallels with Quebec

    Afghan war hero with PTSD faces bail hearing in ongoing legal nightmare

    Afghan war hero with PTSD faces bail hearing in ongoing legal nightmare
    OTTAWA - A former Canadian soldier who received one of the country's highest decorations for bravery faces a two-day bail hearing in Cornwall, Ont., in an unfolding legal nightmare that has ensnared his parents.

    Afghan war hero with PTSD faces bail hearing in ongoing legal nightmare

    Ukraine's president to visit Canada, address Parliament next week

    Ukraine's president to visit Canada, address Parliament next week
    TORONTO - Ukraine's new president, Petro Poroshenko, will visit Canada next week and address Parliament, Prime Minister Stephen Harper announced Thursday night.

    Ukraine's president to visit Canada, address Parliament next week