Lane opens on section of Trans-Canada highway buried by B.C. rock slide - Action News
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Lane opens on section of Trans-Canada highway buried by B.C. rock slide

Traffic is moving again along a section of the Trans-Canada Highway in Yoho National Park in B.C. blocked by a rock slide since Monday.

Section of highway west of Field, B.C., has been closed in both directions since Monday

Efforts to clear the highway have been hampered by poor weather. Authorities had hoped to reopen the Trans-Canada Highway to single-lane, alternating traffic Thursday evening. (Parks Canada)

Traffic is moving again along a sectionof the Trans-Canada Highway inYohoNational Park in B.C. blocked by a rock slide since Monday.

Parks Canada confirms an alternating single lane opened at8 p.m. MT Thursday.

"Motorists should expect heavy traffic congestion, a reduced speed zone of 30 km/h and travel on a 200-metre stretch of gravel surface through the rock slide site," Parks Canada officials said in a press release.

The section of the highway will be closed again for about two hours on Friday afternoon for more blasting of rubble. The exact time will be posted on Drive BC's website.

The highway has been closed in both directions since the slide happenedabout 16 km west of Field, B.C., while contractorswere preparing holes for rock blasting.

The slide brought about 10,000 cubic metres of rock onto the road. Two workers went to hospitalwith injuries, but werelater released.

"Early indications fromgeotechnicalassessments indicate that the slope failed below the drilling and blasting elevation along natural seams in the shale bedrock," Parks Canada said.

Travellers heading to B.C. wereredirected at Castle Junction in Banff National Park, heading southwest on Highway 93 throughKootenayNational Park to Radium and then north on Highway 95 to meet the Trans-Canada again at Golden.

The route in blue shows the detour after a rock slide closed a section of the Trans-Canada Highway west of Field, B.C., on Monday. (Google Maps)

Slide costs trucking industry $75,000 a day, industry says

For commercial truckers, it was an unwelcome detour that wracked up another 100 kilometres through mountainous terrain.

On Wednesday, Andrew Barnes of the Alberta Motor Transport Association said the closure was expensive for his industry.

"It is affecting about 400 trucks a day and the trucks are taking the recommended south detour, which is about an hour-and-a-half. When you convert that to economics, we are looking at about $75,000 a day to industry," he said.

Truck driver DanBosjesaid road closures can cause huge problems for his industry as they are on tight schedules.

"It is really important. Everything we do is on a schedule and something like road closures just makes it even worse,"Bosjetold CBC News from Calgary'sRoadkingTruck Stop.

It's also taken a toll in Field, where supplies were running low.

Truck driver Dan Bosje says staying on schedule is critical for his industry. (Andrew Brown/CBC)

Everett Cooper, the chef at the Truffle Pig Bistro and Lodge in Field, says he and his staff feel a bit trapped.

"It's hard. The hotel slows right down, this is traditionally our slower time of year," he said.

"Our food delivery service couldn't make it through yesterday, so our food supplies get low and we just deal the best we can."

He says it's just a matter of making the best of the situation.

"We basically try and prepare as best we can. Consider the option of closing down the restaurant. We don't get food deliveries when the road is closed. Try and make do with what we have, prioritize. Still try and take care of the customer,"Cooper explained.

He estimates he is losing about $2,000 per day in sales.

"You just have to put up with it, deal with it. The roads to Vancouver close all of the time, once you get into the snow.TheCoquihallaand Rogers Pass close on a regular basis, so it is something we are kind of used to in a way."

Everett Cooper, the chef at the Truffle Pig Bistro and Lodge in Field, says he's likely losing about $2,000 a day in sales from the road closure. (Justin Pennell/CBC)

With files from David Bell, Justin Pennell and Andrew Brown