LAC-MÉGANTIC, Quebec, Aug 19 (Reuters) - The Canadian government did not adequately audit the railroad company at the center of the Lac-Mégantic crude tanker disaster, which last year killed 47 people ...
LAC-MEGANTIC, Quebec (AP) — Crowds packed a church in the eastern Quebec town of Lac-Megantic Sunday to remember the 47 people who were killed there a year ago when a runaway oil train derailed and ...
OTTAWA (Reuters) - Quebec police have concluded their investigation into last July's oil-by-rail disaster in the Quebec town of Lac-Megantic in which 47 people were killed, and have turned the file ...
TORONTO (AP) — Three employees of the railway company involved in last summer’s runaway oil train disaster that killed 47 people are due to appear in court Tuesday to face criminal negligence charges ...
Re: “Little real change in railway safety” (Opinion, July 4) One of the reasons that nothing seems to change in the aftermath of a disaster is that any investigation into the causes invariably gets ...
• 11:25 p.m.Friday, July 5: The train, carrying some 100,000 liters of crude oil, is parked in the village of Nantes, about six miles from Lac-Megantic, by the train engineer, who had just finished ...
Success. Please wait for the page to reload. If the page does not reload within 5 seconds, please refresh the page. Enter your email and password to access comments ...
The Canadian Press on MSN
Court of Appeal upholds ruling that CP Rail was not liable for Lac-Mégantic disaster
MONTREAL — Quebec's Court of Appeal has upheld a 2022 lower court ruling that found Canadian Pacific Railway did not have ...
Adrien Aubert was moments away from death. At around 1 a.m. on July 6, the 29-year-old, who works for the social network Plogg, was having a beer with friends outside his home in Lac-Mégantic, Québec, ...
When a train carrying crude oil derailed in the Quebec town of Lac-Mégantic in 2013, the results were catastrophic: The derailment and oil spill triggered explosions and fires that destroyed half of ...
(AP) Three employees and the railway company involved in last summer’s massive explosion of a runaway oil train that incinerated much of a small town in Quebec, killing 47 people, will face criminal ...
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results