Friday, December 26, 2025
ADVT 
National

Warning for photo-snapping drivers on B.C. highway

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 20 Jan, 2022 10:40 AM
  • Warning for photo-snapping drivers on B.C. highway

VANCOUVER - A key British Columbia highway has reopened to all traffic after being torn apart by disastrous flooding in November but it only took hours for the Transportation Ministry to issue a safety reminder.

In a post on social media, the ministry says it has received reports of people stopping "in unsafe ways" to take pictures along the Coquihalla Highway corridor, also known as Highway 5.

A roughly 130-kilometre stretch of the multi-lane, high-speed link between the Lower Mainland and the Interior was ripped up by floods or slides that also collapsed or washed out seven bridges during a series of powerful rainstorms.

Crews working around the clock spent 35 days to restore one lane in each direction, although the route was restricted to commercial vehicles as vital supply chains were re-established.

After reopening to all traffic Wednesday, the ministry says it quickly received reports of two unprepared drivers running out of gas while many more were stopping to take photos of the flood damage.

The Facebook post says the extent of the devastation and scope of the ongoing repairs are remarkable, but stopping on the narrower road or unfinished shoulders is extremely dangerous.

"The work is impressive. We get it," the ministry says in the post.

"But you're putting yourself and others in harm's way."

Speed limits along many of the repaired sections of the mountainous highway have been cut to 50 km/h, which the ministry says will add nearly an hour to the trip between Hope and Merritt. It also warns drivers that rest stop and other services are not available.

 

MORE National ARTICLES

Heat warnings raise wildfire anxiety in B.C.

Heat warnings raise wildfire anxiety in B.C.
The BC Wildfire Service fire danger map shows risk levels have returned to high or extreme across southern Vancouver Island and most of the central Interior following last weekend's showers.

Heat warnings raise wildfire anxiety in B.C.

Garneau condemns Chinese sentence on Spavor

Garneau condemns Chinese sentence on Spavor
Garneau in a news conference said the government condemns "in the strongest possible terms" the prison sentence, which followed a closed-door trial in March in which Spavor was found guilty of spying on China.

Garneau condemns Chinese sentence on Spavor

Tories question CERB's backstage bureaucracy

Tories question CERB's backstage bureaucracy
The $2,000-per-month Canada Emergency Response Benefit amounted to "two entirely different relief programs, distributed by different government agencies and with different eligibility criteria," though seniors were never informed, Falk wrote in an Aug. 9 letter obtained by The Canadian Press.

Tories question CERB's backstage bureaucracy

Canada's vaccine stockpile tops 20 million doses

Canada's vaccine stockpile tops 20 million doses
Data on vaccine deliveries, distribution and injections provided by Health Canada and the provinces show almost 22 million doses have been delivered but not yet used.

Canada's vaccine stockpile tops 20 million doses

Meng Wanzhou's extradition hearing to start

Meng Wanzhou's extradition hearing to start
Her long-awaited extradition hearing is proceeding as courts in China prosecute Canadians whose sentencing or detentions are widely been seen as retaliation for her 2018 arrest.

Meng Wanzhou's extradition hearing to start

Mendicino, Mayorkas talk Cda-U.S. border in D.C

Mendicino, Mayorkas talk Cda-U.S. border in D.C
Monday marked the first day in nearly 17 months that U.S. citizens and permanent residents who are fully vaccinated were allowed to visit Canada.

Mendicino, Mayorkas talk Cda-U.S. border in D.C