British Columbia

UVic opens counselling services after deadly bus crash kills 2 students

University of Victoria students are grappling with the sudden deaths of two of their peers in a bus crash Friday evening en route to a marine research centre.

University of Victoria counsellors and staff met with students and families Saturday afternoon

Search and rescue crews and RCMP help a tow-truck crew to remove a bus from the ditch of a logging road near Bamfield, B.C., on Saturday, Sept. 14, 2019. (Chad Hipolito/The Canadian Press)

University of Victoria students are grappling with the sudden deaths of two of their peers in a bus crash Friday evening en route to a marine research centre.

Forty-five students and two teaching assistants were aboard the bus to Bamfield Marine Sciences Centre when it went off a gravel road and down an embankment about 40 kilometres from Port Alberni on Vancouver Island, according to a statement from the university.

Two students, whose identities have yet to be made public, died at the scene and 17 others were transported to hospital in varying conditions.

John Kang, an events organizer with the university's biology undergraduate society, said he learned about the crash from friends on social media. On the morning after the crash he was leading a student birdwatching trip to Pedder Bay, about 30 kilometres southwest of Victoria.

the wreck of a bus that fatally crashed, blackened and all windows gone. It has the word "Wilson's" painted on the side.
A passenger bus involved in an accident along a logging road Friday night is carried from the crash scene by a tow-truck near Bamfield, B.C. on Saturday, September 14, 2019. Two University of Victoria students died and more than a dozen other people were injured after a bus on its way to a marine research centre rolled over on a narrow gravel road on Vancouver Island on Friday. The incident happened between the communities of Port Alberni and Bamfield, said the Joint Rescue Co-ordination Centre in Victoria, which received a call for assistance at around 10 p.m. (Chad Hipolito/The Canadian Press)

The students talked about the crash on the way to Pedder Bay, he said, and some were upset.

"It was pretty scary," said Kang, who added one of his friends was on the bus.

"So, I was a bit worried," he said. He assumes his friend is OK, but hasn't had contact yet.

"I'm just kind of waiting, giving them some space."

Counselling offering

Meanwhile, University of Victoria counsellors and other staff met with students and their families throughout Saturday afternoon to provide support, a statement said.

It offered a gathering space for families to reunite with their children, it said, and university president Jamie Cassels met with students and their families.

UVic students walk to a bus in Port Alberni on Saturday Sept. 14, 2019 after another bus they were on flipped on a gravel road on its way to the Bamfield Marine Sciences Centre. 2 people died in the crash and three others were seriously injured. 47 people were on the bus. (Dean Stoltz/CHEK News)

The school opened counselling services for students seeking help Sunday from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. PT in the University Centre.

"The entire university is coming together to help at this difficult time," the statement said, adding the school will make allowances and provide additional support for students to help them in their studies.

Kang is planning to make his first trip to the Bamfield centre in October.

Safety concerns

The research centre acts as a shared campus of several post-secondary institutions, including the University of Victoria, and offers summer field courses, a five-course fall semester program and field trips.

Kang hopes some of the road issues are fixed before his visit.

(CBC)

Some have criticized the narrow gravel road for being dangerous, and a local First Nations community and the city of Port Alberni have called on the provincial government for years to enhance the quality of the 85-kilometre logging road where the crash occurred.

Western Forest Products, which holds permits for sections of the road, said in a statement Sunday that the portion of the road where the incident occurred was graded on Sept. 12.

The company says it supports local communities' requests to upgrade the road and has written letters of support to provincial ministers on the matter.

A spokesperson for the provincial forestry ministry said Saturday that the ministry was unable to comment pending the ongoing investigation.

'Experienced' driver

The driver of the bus is "experienced" and holds "driver-training certification," according to a statement from The Wilson's Group, which owns Wilson's Transportation Ltd., whose 2001 Prevost XL2 bus was the one in the accident.

The driver sustained non-life threatening injuries and has been released from the hospital, the company said.

Many hundreds of potholes full of mud are seen on a dirt road surrounded by forest
Dodging potholes is common along the road known as the Bamfield Main that leads to Bamfield, B.C. (Chad Hipolito/The Canadian Press)

The bus, which was equipped with seat restraints, was recently inspected and passed all regulatory requirements, according to the statement.

"We do not know what the cause of the incident is at this point," said the company, adding it is co-operating and working with the RCMP to help aid the investigation.

With files from Rob Drinkwater