August 8, 2003
Eleven trucks confiscated
in Kuujjuaq
Response to public safety
concerns
ODILE NELSON
Provincial vehicle inspectors
impounded 11 commercial trucks in Kuujjuaq last week for failing to meet safety
standards.
Inspectors from the Société
de l'assurance automobile du Québec (SAAQ) travelled to Nunavik at the
request of the Kativik Regional Police Force. Police invited the inspectors
after receiving numerous complaints from residents about the run-down condition
of trucks that had arrived for the annual summer construction season.
SAAQ inspectors examined
12 vehicles in all and eventually confiscated 11 for a variety of serious defects,
including faulty brakes and shaved off dry shafts, KRPF chief Brian Jones told
Nunatsiaq News.
Southern construction companies
owned many of the confiscated vehicles, Jones said, but some were the property
of the Village of Kuujjuaq and local contractors.
Jones declined to identify
which southern companies owned the vehicles but said the inspection was a community
safety issue.
"I think it was a
public hazard - with the amount of people in the community now, with the number
of young kids playing and summer camps and the amount of construction going
on right now too," he said.
This summer construction
sites in Kuujjuaq include the airport and construction of a new school, Jones
said.
Owners will have to repair
their trucks and have them re-inspected before police allow them back on the
road.
The one-time inspection
has highlighted a need for more routine exams of heavy vehicles that arrive
in Nunavik.
Jones said the SAAQ and
KRPF will now work together to establish a biannual, region-wide inspection
schedule for trucks in Nunavik.
"We want to make the
roads safer in Nunavik because of the growing population and also because the
communities' roads will be paved over the coming years [and more heavy vehicles
will be on the roads]" Jones said.
The SAAQ should issue a
full report in the next two weeks, Jones said.
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