Slow down on highway 63 it will catch up to you big crash today

gotboost

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WANDERING RIVER, Alta. - Seven people were killed and two injured in "horrific" head-on collision on one of Alberta's deadliest highways.
The crash between happened Friday afternoon when a pickup truck going north on Highway 63 pulled out to pass another vehicle, colliding with another pickup travelling south.
"There was a significant fire as a result of the impact," said Const. Christina Wilkins of Fort McMurray RCMP.
Passing motorists pulled a teenaged girl from the pickup that had been passing, say police. She was airlifted to a hospital in Edmonton, but died a few hours later from her injuries.
A young boy and a 34-year-old man were also airlifted to Edmonton hospitals. Their conditions are not known, and the identities and hometowns of the dead and injured have not been released.
It was snowing in the area at the time of the crash on the two-lane, undivided highway.
"There was some reduced visibility," Wilkins said, adding weather was still bad late Friday.
"We ask that people please be careful when they're travelling south of Fort McMurray, given the weather and the road conditions are still unfavourable."
Six people were in one of the pickups, while three were in the truck that had tried to pass.
RCMP say Highway 63 will not reopen for at least another five hours, and traffic continues to be re-routed to Secondary Highway 881.
Two years ago, volunteer firefighters from Wandering River stopped responding to accidents on the highway because they found the work overwhelming.
In 2011, the provincial government and Athabasca County invested $1.3 million to hire more emergency responders to cover the route.
The highway is a busy route stretching north of Edmonton to Fort McMurray and north to the oilsands, where thousands of people work and tonnes of material and equipment moves daily.
Between 2001 and 2005, more than 1,000 crashes killed 25 people and injured 257 others on the highway.
In 2006, after years of public pressure, the Alberta government announced that it would twin a 240-kilometre stretch of the road. As of October 2009, 16 kilometres had been twinned.
 

700BDL

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I live up here and know that road well....it's nuts the people that drive that road think they are at the Daytona 500......I've been on it pulling my 5th wheel doing a buck ten and people going by me like I'm in their way. At times looking in my mirror and they start pulling out to pass way behind me and I swear when they go by me it seems they're doing 160. Next time I go south I'm taking 881....and that roads getting bad also.
 

RZR101

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Traveled it too many times, mostly average speed, a lot of hot rodders and too many 80km that shouldn't be on it. Our government should put out the cash to finish the twining and save a few more lives.
 

pipes

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sad story indeed. It's funny how the highway gets labeled as being dangerous. Ive driven that highway in the past and haven't found the highway to be dangerous at all. It's the drivers that are dangerous. I don't miss traveling on that highway.
 

barleyfarmer

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I've never been on it.........But is it the highway or the drivers?.......Is it narrow and curvey or is it everyone is driving like idiots?
 

neilsleder

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I've never been on it.........But is it the highway or the drivers?.......Is it narrow and curvey or is it everyone is driving like idiots?

I only been on it twice. And it's no different then any other hiway. So I am led to believe it's more the drivers.
 
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