Monday, March 30, 2026
ADVT 
National

Students From Manitoba And U.S., Killed In Vancouver Island Bus Crash: Coroner

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 16 Sep, 2019 07:21 PM

    VICTORIA - Two 18-year-old students, a woman from Manitoba and an American man, have been identified as the victims of a fatal bus crash on Vancouver Island.

     

    The British Columbia Coroners Service released the information but says the names of either victim will not be revealed.

     

    Both died when a charter bus carrying 45 University of Victoria students, two teaching assistants and the driver crashed on a gravel road between the communities of Port Alberni and Bamfield late Friday.

     

    More than a dozen other students were injured.

     

    The coroners service says in a statement that no further information about the victims will be provided until investigations into the deaths are concluded.

     

    The University of Victoria says the students were travelling to the Bamfield Marine Science Centre when the crash occurred.

     

    Robert Dennis, chief councillor for the Huu-ay-aht First Nations, drove past the scene shortly after the crash and said the bus was overturned and about six to nine metres down an embankment, resting against trees that stopped it from rolling further.

     

    Port Alberni Mayor Sharie Minions described the nearly 80-kilometre road as mostly gravel and "challenging at the best of times."

     

    The city has supported the First Nations community's call for improvements to the road and has also reached out to the provincial government, she said.

     

    The university began offering counselling services to survivors on Sunday after they returned to the Victoria campus and it said additional support would be offered to help students continue their studies.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Social Media Giants In Hot Seat As Politicians Consider Regulations

    Social Media Giants In Hot Seat As Politicians Consider Regulations
    OTTAWA — Tech giants will be in the hot seat this week as politicians from Canada and 10 other countries gather to consider how best to protect citizens' privacy and their democracies in the age of social media.

    Social Media Giants In Hot Seat As Politicians Consider Regulations

    Canada Files North Pole Competing Claim With Russia, Denmark

    Canada Files North Pole Competing Claim With Russia, Denmark
    Canada is heading for negotiations over who owns the North Pole.

    Canada Files North Pole Competing Claim With Russia, Denmark

    Weather Network Forecasts Starkly Different Summer Conditions Across Canada

    Weather Network Forecasts Starkly Different Summer Conditions Across Canada
    The weather this summer could be starkly different across the country, according to the latest long range forecast from The Weather Network.    

    Weather Network Forecasts Starkly Different Summer Conditions Across Canada

    Could This 20-Year-Old Montreal Polyglot Be Canada's Most Multilingual Student?

    MONTREAL — Georges Awaad answers the phone with a polite "Hello," but he could just as easily answer in Arabic, French, Japanese, or any of the other 15 languages he speaks.

    Could This 20-Year-Old Montreal Polyglot Be Canada's Most Multilingual Student?

    Three More Confirmed Measles Cases Brings Total To Eight In New Brunswick

    SAINT JOHN, N.B. — Health officials in New Brunswick have three more confirmed cases of measles — bringing the total to eight cases in the Saint John area.    

    Three More Confirmed Measles Cases Brings Total To Eight In New Brunswick

    As They Turn 85, Dionne Sisters Caution About The Perils Of Childhood Celebrity

    Within hours of their improbable birth on May 28, 1934, the Dionne quintuplets were thrust into the spotlight as reporters staked outside their family's isolated farmhouse in northern Ontario to see if any of the premature infants would make it through their first few days.

    As They Turn 85, Dionne Sisters Caution About The Perils Of Childhood Celebrity