Labour groups want independent investigation into death of 3 CP Railway workers
Two labour groups are calling for an independent investigation into the deaths of three Canadian Pacific Railway employees in a British Columbia train crash almost a year ago.
Conductor Dylan Paradis, engineer Andrew Dockrell and trainee Daniel Waldenberger-Bulmer died last February after a two-kilometre-long runaway grain train fell more than 60 metres from a bridge. The train took off near Field, B.C., about 15 kilometres west of the Alberta boundary, when its air brakes failed.
After the crash, Transport Canada ordered that all railway companies must use handbrakes when trains are stopped on a mountain grade after an emergency use of their air brakes.
The Alberta Federation of Labour alleges the CP Police Service, which is directly employed by the railway, conducted a flawed investigation.