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Manitoba

Manitobans prepare to remember victims of deadly bus crash as 1st anniversary nears

The year that has passed since a bus crash killed 17 seniorsheaded to a Manitoba casino on a bright late-spring day has been oneof grief, community support, a slow return to normal and, for some, a long road to recovery.

Dauphin residents to unveil memorial next weekend in honour of 17 killed in crash

Three people embrace while looking at a large photo of their loved one.
Loved ones and first responders place placards honouring those killed in an accident near Carberry, Man., at Dauphins Credit Union Place a week after the June 2023 crash. (Chelsea Kemp/CBC)

The year that has passed since a bus crash killed 17 seniorsheaded to a Manitoba casino on a bright late-spring day has been oneof grief, community support, a slow return to normal and, for some, a long road to recovery.

It has also left unanswered questions about the genesis of the horrific June 15, 2023 crash that left the bus in flames, debris strewn in alldirections and first responders dealing with a chaotic scene of death and injury.

Dauphin, a city of 8,000 residents in western Manitoba, is a place where almost everyone knows everyone. Most know someone whowas killed or injured in the crash or someone related to a victim.

On Saturday, the anniversary of the crash, residents are to unveil a monument to the lives lost.

"June 15 will be forever embedded in the minds of most of our community," Dauphin Mayor David Bosiak said in an interview.

"It's like Sept. 11. People remember what they were doing that day."

An overhead view of a highway intersection. Several vehicles are on the road, and there are large skid and burn marks across the highway.
A June 16, 2023, drone photo of the highway intersection that was the site of a fatal crash near Carberry, Man., on June 15. (Tyson Koschik/CBC)

Don Stokotelny is among those connected to the tragedy.

His mother, Josephine Stokotelny, 86, was severely injured in the crash and has spent the last year recovering. She suffered braindamage, uses a walker to get around and is in assisted living.

CBC News recently profiled JosephineStokotelny and her road to recovery.

Don Stokotelnyknows the bus driver. He had hired the driver on previous occasions for small group outings and considers the man a caringperson.

Don Stokotelny said he has chosen forgiveness over anger.

"We used his services to cart Mom around and some of her friends to other events, so he took care of these people like they were hisown," Don Stokotelny said.

"If he's at fault, then he just made a mistake. And we accept that and we have no interest in looking at that any further."

'A devastating scene'

The bus, with 25 people on board, left Dauphin and was headed to a casino near Carberry, a two-hour drive south. It was on Highway 5and nearing its destination when it came to a busy stretch of theTrans-Canada Highway.

The bus first came across a stop sign, then a yield sign in the median, before it started to cross the eastbound lanes of thehighway and was hit by a semi-trailer.

RCMP said dashcam video showed the truck had the right of way. The crash caused the bus to burst into flames and end up in a ditch.

Josephine Stokotelny was thrown clear of the bus and taken tohospital in critical condition. Her son recalled seeing her severelyinjured, unable to breathe on her own.

"She was literally broken from head to toe," he said.

"She had 17 different devices hooked up to her -- tubes, breathing devices, etc. There was a long time there where we weren'tsure if she was at all going to pull through."

Emergency crews rushed to the scene ground ambulances and police, then a STARS helicopter. Survivors were taken to hospital inBrandon, and many were airlifted to the province's major trauma centre in Winnipeg. STARS brought in reinforcements fromSaskatchewan.

"It was a devastating scene, according to our crew. Everywhere they looked, there was trauma," said Grant Therrien with STARS, whowas part of the team treating and transferring patients from Brandon.

A bouquet of flowers and a dream catcher near a stop sign along the road.
A makeshift memorial in pictured near the crash site along the highway near Carberry, Man., in June 2023. (Gilbert Rowan/CBC)

There were funerals in the days that followed. Some who initially survived were taken to hospital but later died. The 17th fatalitywas 79-year-old Catherine Day, who died a month after the crash.

The driver of the bus was severely injured. RCMP said they have been unable to talk to him, and health officials have not releaseddetails of his condition due to provincial privacy laws.

Mounties submitted a report on the crash to the Manitoba Prosecution Service, which has yet to decide whether to lay charges.

In Dauphin, the tragedy continues to be felt. For some, family get-togethers and holiday gatherings are a reminder that a loved onecan't be there.

"As time went on, the community got back to 'normal.' However, for the 16 or 17 families that were impacted directly ... there wasa tremendous amount of change for them," Bosiak said.

The ceremony on the anniversary would be a chance for families to again support each other and "see how everybody's doing,"Stokotelny said.

"The City of Dauphin and all the people around [have been]offering their best wishes and condolences ... it's been incrediblefor sure."