No plans to remove double-deckers from Transitway after fatal crash - Action News
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Ottawa

No plans to remove double-deckers from Transitway after fatal crash

Double-decker buses will not be pulled from the Transitway now that it's reopened following Friday's fatal crash at Westboro station, according to the head of OC Transpo.

Transitway reopened Sunday, 2 days after bus slammed into Westboro station shelter

Two men in black jackets look at a damaged bus.
The Transitway reopened Sunday evening, more than 48 hours after this double-decker bus collided with the shelter at Westboro station. (Justin Tang/Canadian Press)

Double-decker buses will not be pulled from the Transitwaynow that it's back open after Friday's fatal crash at Westboro station, according to the head of OC Transpo.

Three people were killed and 23 injured Friday afternoon when a double-deckerbus bound for Kanataslammed into a bus shelter at the station.

"I know, and I fully respect, that there's a lot of questions out there about [whether they're] safe," OC Transpo general manager John Manconitold CBC NewsSunday night.

"We have very safe vehicles. They are tested. They exceed all inspection requirements. We had rigorousindependent testing done when those vehicles were brought on board."

Flowers and candles are set up at Ottawa's Westboro station on Jan. 13, 2019, two days after three people were killed and 23 injured in a crash involving an OC Transpo double-decker bus. (Robyn Miller/CBC)

Open at 7:30 p.m.

After the crash, theTransitwaywas closed between Dominion and Tunney's Pasture.

The City of Ottawa said Sunday afternoon thatthe Transitwaywould reopen at 7:30 p.m., and that temporary bus stops set up on nearby Scott Street would be closed.

In a tweet, Mayor Jim Watson said staff with both OC Transpo and Ottawa Public Health would be on-hand tonight and Monday to assist riders.

Manconisaiddouble-deckerbuses would also run along route 269, which was the route the bus involved in Friday's crash was traveling along.

"We are very, very confident they're safe vehicles. They will be out in use," saidManconi. "And if our customers have any questions, our operators have any questions, we're there to assist."

The city has also set up two temporary memorial sites at Westborostation: one on the lower level of the westbound Transitway platform, and another on the upper level at the corner of Scott Street and Athlone Avenue.

A stretch of Scott Street near Westborostation had also been closed after the crash, but it reopened Saturday.