Renewed calls for safety meridians between Lake Country and Kelowna

Another fatal accident on high speed stretch of Highway 97 has Lake Country upping its calls for safety barriers

The District of Lake Country is renewing its call for safety meridians on the stretch of highway 97 between Lake Country and Kelowna after another fatal motor vehicle accident near Duck Lake on the weekend.

A 48-year-old woman died on Saturday after reports stated the SUV she was driving crossed the centre line and collided with a semi tractor trailer unit. the accident closed the highway for up top three hours as RCMP investigated.

The accident is the latest in a long and deadly history on the road between Lake Country and Kelowna, a four-lane stretch of heavily-driven highway.

In September, Lake Country fire chief Steve Windsor reported that there was a substantial increase in traffic accidents between Lake Country and Kelowna this year and had sent a request to the Ministry of Transportation asking about the possibility of safety meridians.

At the UBCM meeting later that month in Whistler Lake Country officials reiterated the request for the safety barriers to be installed.

And now Lake Country mayor James Baker says it appears the ministry will act although there is nothing official and no timeline for the installation of the barriers.

“We’ve been at them for sometime that they should have those barriers installed,” said Baker. “They have told us they are moving on getting those barriers. It seems they are listening and we should start to see them at least design where they could put them. They have to look at how many accesses they will have to permit because in some places there are properties that need access to both directions.”

Lake Country fire officials responded to the accident just before 2 p.m. Saturday and were on scene until about 5 p.m. when the highway was opened.

Windsor said the highway is known for the speed at which vehicles travel making accidents hard to avoid.

“It’s just a high speed highway and for whatever reason if you have inattention, you have very little time to correct it,” said Windsor. “At those kinds of speeds, it’s just a millisecond and if you drift at all you can be in teh other land very, very quickly.”

Windsor a substantial amount of diesel fuel was spilled in the accident but crews built a berm using sand to keep the fuel from running into Duck Lake.

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