City of Saskatoon revisits bus driver training program after pedestrians hit - Action News
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Saskatoon

City of Saskatoon revisits bus driver training program after pedestrians hit

The City of Saskatoon is revisiting its training program for bus drivers after a handful of bus collisions with pedestrians, including two since December.

3 pedestrians hit by Saskatoon Transit buses since December, 2 at same intersection

The City of Saskatoon is looking for opportunities to improve driver training after three pedestrians were hit in the past four months. (Chanss Lagaden/CBC)

The City of Saskatoon is revisiting its training program for bus drivers after a handful of bus collisions with pedestrians, including two at the same intersection.

Three pedestrians have been hit and injured by Saskatoon Transit buses since December, with two of the injuries occurring at the same intersection near the downtown bus terminal.

Last week, the city's general manager of transportation Jeff Jorgenson told a city council meeting his department was looking at ways to improvetraining.

"Transit is going to work with transportation division to see if there's any extreme measures that we can take and any changes that can be made in order to attempt to reduce the chance of any further collisions," saidJorgenson.

Callfor safety review

Last month, Ron Prochner called for a full transit safety review after his 88-year-old motherwas struck by a bus while crossing the street at the intersection of Third Avenue N. and 23rd Street E. in December 2016.

Lella Prochner last month started relearning to walk with a walker after she was hit by a city bus in December. In March, she was recovering in the Parkridge Centre home after leaving hospital at the end of February. (Don Somers/CBC News)

In March, a 54-year-old woman was hit and injured while crossing the street at the same intersection. The City of Saskatoon said it believes the two incidents at Third and 23rd occurred under different circumstances.

Another woman, 19, was hit by a city bus at the corner of Quebec Avenue and Circle Drivethat same month.

Fatality at intersection 10 years ago

Speaking at the city council meeting last week, Jorgenson said the city was aware of a fatality at the Third Avenue N. and23rdStreet E. intersection about 10 years ago.

He said a number of changes to the training program had been implemented sincethat death.

In particular, the existing trainingspecifically addresses an issue with left-hand turns. Abus drivers' union in Edmonton blamed a left-turn blind spot forat least one pedestrian fatality in that city.

No problem with intersection, says collision analysis

Jorgenson said there were no "fundamental problems" with the Third Avenue N.and 23rd Street E. intersection, which is near the downtown bus mall, based on collision analysis.

"The issue there is that is our highest conflict location in the city because that is the most left turns for transit, and also they're in conflict with a high number of pedestrians crossing Third Avenue," he said during last week's meeting.

Jorgenson said the existing training program specifically addresses that intersection, but the departmentcould "always do better."

"When you get that number of incidences, maybe there is something else that can be done," he said.

A report on the review will be public information whenit is ready to go to the Standing Policy Committee on Transportation.