‘It doesn’t really resolve the issues;’ Residents along Highway 5A unsatisfied with new sensors
KAMLOOPS — On Friday (Jan. 20), the B.C. government announced sensors will be built into a stretch of Highway 5A near Merritt. The sensors will monitor commercial trucks as they pass, collecting the vehicle’s height, weight and tire conditions and comparing them against acceptable and enforced standards.
For years, residents living along Highway 5A between Kamloops and Merritt have been lobbying for safety improvements to the route. The Upper Nicola Band’s land stretches along corridor. Chief Harvey McLeod believes more action is required to alleviate safety concerns of his community that have existed since the Coquihalla was opened in 1986.
“It doesn’t really resolve the issues or concerns that I have, or others have who live along the corridor of Highway 5A, and that is the trucks themselves and the safety of the citizens who live up and down that corridor,” said McLeod. “It doesn’t address the numbers of trucks. It doesn’t address the driving habits of commercial truck drivers.”