Vancouver British Columbia - A bid to certify a class-action lawsuit that alleges a wildfire that
destroyed much of Lytton in 2021 was caused by a train got under way in B.C. Supreme Court in Vancouver on
Monday.
Lawyers for Christopher O'Connor and Jordan Spinks, the two representative plaintiffs in the case, argued in court that
the blaze was ignited as a result of a coal train owned by Canadian Pacific Railway passing through the village on
30 Jun 2021.
The ensuing wildfire killed at least two individuals, injured others, and resulted in the near complete destruction of
the village and surrounding area.
It happened during a heat wave in which temperatures soared to a national record 49.6 degrees C.
Spinks is a member of the Kanaka Bar Indian Band and states in the notice of civil claim that he witnessed smoke and
flames on CN Rail's right-of-way, at or near CN Rail's bridge that crosses the Fraser River.
He had just finished his shift as a care aide at an assisted-living facility, and lost his job as a result of the fire,
says the lawsuit.
O'Connor, a resident of Lytton, lost his home in the fire and had his vehicle damaged.
The legal action is being brought on behalf of all individuals, or their estates, who suffered personal injury or death
in the fire, and all individuals who were displaced by the fire, or who suffered property losses.
The railway companies that are defendants in the case deny any responsibility for the blaze, and according to the
plaintiffs are pointing to a report by the Transportation Safety Board of Canada that concluded there was no link
between train operations and the fire.
But Tony Vecchio, a lawyer for the plaintiffs, argued in court that the report was deficient in a number of respects
and should not be relied upon.
"They didn't have any basis to make this finding at all, on their own evidence," Vecchio told B.C. Supreme
Chief Justice Christopher Hinkson.
He pointed to several of what he called errors in the report, including the number of railway cars on the train, and
said there was a failure to interview a number of witnesses.
That argument resonated with Tricia Thorpe, who lost her home, her farm, and her animals in the Lytton
fire.
She travelled to Vancouver on Monday because she said there had been a lack of information and transparency about the
case and people wanted to know what was going on.
Regarding the questions about the TSB report, she said people affected by the fire would tend to agree with the
assertions of the plaintiff's lawyer.
"People need closure, and from a personal point of view, there were people lost, people have lost their
homes," Thorpe said outside court.
"The whole community was affected, not just the people that lost their homes. I don't think there's a single
person in the Lytton area that hasn't been affected by this. And it has physical and mental health issues involved with
it. We need answers, and we need to move forward, and maybe this is a step to getting things to move
forward."
Thorpe, an electoral area director of the Thompson-Nicola regional district, said she was speaking as an individual
citizen and not as a director.
The court proceedings are expected to continue until Friday.
Keith Fraser.
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