Tuesday, June 16, 2026
ADVT 
National

Track failure led to B.C. train derailment: report

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 04 Nov, 2020 09:09 PM
  • Track failure led to B.C. train derailment: report

The Transportation Safety Board says a track failure contributed to the derailment of a freight train in northern British Columbia in January.

No one was hurt when 34 cars carrying wood pellets on the Canadian National Railway Co. train left the tracks between the communities of Smithers and Terrace.

The board's report on the incident says video and audio evidence from the train strongly suggests a sudden track failure occurred.

The report says testing on the same stretch of tracks in July and September 2019 showed the number of "deviations" in the width between the tracks had increased along that section.

The agency says the weight and number of railcars travelling on the route sped up the deterioration of the track before the derailment.

The agency noted that was the third such derailment in the area after 27 coal cars derailed in January 2018 and 52 empty cars derailed in December 2017.

Companies in this story: (TSX: CNR)

MORE National ARTICLES

Federal Minister, B.C. Premier Try For Meetings With Chiefs Over Blockades

The federal and British Columbia governments are working to arrange meetings with Indigenous leaders in an effort to halt blockades of rail lines that have choked Canada's economy.

Federal Minister, B.C. Premier Try For Meetings With Chiefs Over Blockades

Ex-Hasidic Man Educated In Religious School Had Never Heard Of Science, Trial Told

Ex-Hasidic Man Educated In Religious School Had Never Heard Of Science, Trial Told
A former member of an ultra-Orthodox Hasidic Jewish group north of Montreal has told a courtroom that he graduated from an unlicensed religious school without ever hearing the words "science" or "geography."

Ex-Hasidic Man Educated In Religious School Had Never Heard Of Science, Trial Told

Economy Significantly Weaker Ending 2019: PBO

Canada's economy slowed "sharply" in the final quarter of 2019, the parliamentary budget office said Thursday in its February economic and fiscal report.

Economy Significantly Weaker Ending 2019: PBO

Supreme Court Of Canada To Hear Appeals On Solitary Confinement

Supreme Court Of Canada To Hear Appeals On Solitary Confinement
The Supreme Court of Canada will revisit the decisions of courts in British Columbia and Ontario that said the federal law allowing prolonged solitary confinement in prison was unconstitutional.

Supreme Court Of Canada To Hear Appeals On Solitary Confinement

Federal NDP Seeks Provincial Support For National Pharmacare Plan

The New Democrats are asking the provinces to support their promised universal pharmacare legislation, hoping to win premiers over by calling on Ottawa to increase federal health transfers.

Federal NDP Seeks Provincial Support For National Pharmacare Plan

Auctioneer Ordered To Pay Collector For Knowingly Selling Fake Inuit Statue

A high-end auction house has been ordered to further compensate a British art collector for selling him a statue it claimed was by a renowned Inuit artist, even though it knew the piece was fake.

Auctioneer Ordered To Pay Collector For Knowingly Selling Fake Inuit Statue