Photo credit to Huffington Post Alberta
I could engage in some ranting, I suppose, but I just don’t have the energy anymore. I have written about it, done interviews about it, discussed it, lost sleep over it and had it consume not just hours or days but weeks of my life. It seems no matter what I say – what anyone says – it keeps happening.
People keep dying on Highway 63.
In the past two weeks four individuals have lost their life
on the stretch of highway that has become famous – or rather infamous – in our
country. Less than a week ago I travelled the highway just after it reopened
after yet another of these tragic, senseless deaths that rip apart families and
tear at the fabric of our community.
There are those who blame the highway, and while twinning
will almost certainly reduce the number of head-on collisions and the
likelihood of resulting fatalities it will not address the other factor seen on
this highway – and if we are honest we all will admit to having seen it, if not
engaged in it.
Unsafe driving behaviour is rampant, and over my thirteen
years driving that highway I have seen more close calls that I can recount.
Speeding, driving too fast for conditions, unsafe passing, aggressive driving, inattention, fatigue
and sadly even driving when under the influence of drugs or alcohol are far too
commonplace. Just this week someone told me the tale of almost being struck by
another vehicle, and watching the police apprehend a driver who was too
intoxicated to even exit their vehicle in a dignified way, more "pouring out" of
it than stepping out to rest their feet on that stretch of asphalt.
We can blame the highway if we want, decry the length of
time it took to secure the commitment to twin it. Or we can acknowledge that
while there may be some truth in that the real truth is that we are killing
each other and ourselves on that highway. We can deny this all we want, but
denial, as they say, isn’t just a river in Egypt. In this case denial is
instead a river of tears cried over a small highway in northern Alberta where
far too many fragile lives have been lost.
I read on social media how it is the highway to blame, how
somehow that stretch of road has reached up to pull us down into it, ending our
lives as if it is some living, breathing malevolent force. But it isn’t, of
course. It is just a road, and while it may have some imperfections it is the
imperfections of those who travel it that cause the majority of these
collisions – and these deaths. If we are to be quite frank the twinning is
necessary not because it is a bad road, but because we are far too often bad
drivers who need to be protected from each other and ourselves.
The highway has seen an incredible increase in traffic, that
is true, and so the twinning makes sense for this reason as well. But as the increase
in traffic has developed a corollary decrease in our patience seems to have
happened, too. Just at the time when we
need to exercise the most caution and patience we seem to have lost it
entirely, putting ourselves at even greater risk.
I too am anxious to see the highway twinning complete. I am
not naive enough to believe it will end all collisions or fatalities on Highway
63, though, because I know that there are those who will continue their unsafe
behaviours and continue to put us all at risk. I believe it will help to
staunch the flow of tears – and blood – on that highway but it will not cause
it to cease entirely.
I don’t have the ranting in me anymore, you see. All I have
now is a deep sense of sadness every single time I hear the words “accident on
63” and a dread of the news that I fear will almost certainly follow. I wish I
knew the solution. I don’t. All I know today is that it has happened again.
All I know is that today there is grief and sorrow and
sadness, a feeling that has become all too familiar when hearing the words “Highway
63”. All I know is how sad and weary I am of it all. I have come to think of Highway 63 not as the Highway of Tears or even the Highway of Death as external media often suggests. I see it as the Highway of Denial, where we deny we have any complicity in what happens there, preferring to blame anyone or anything but ourselves. How easy it is to blame a stretch of road - and how difficult it is to shoulder the blame ourselves and realize that our denial is slowly and inexorably killing others - and ourselves.
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