Rumbling truck brakes push Alberta town to urge speed-limit reduction, changed signage
The jarring sound of engine brakes on heavy-duty trucks has become a cause for concern among residents in Devon.
Some of the 6,546 people who live in the Edmonton bedroom community, including the town's mayor, have written letters to the province asking for a change in the speed limit around the highway intersection that hosts the offending noise.
Devon resident Doug Martel, who lives two blocks from the intersection of Highway 60 and Miquelon Avenue, said he's clocked approaching trucks coming up to it well over the posted 70 kilometres-per-hour speed limit.
“I’ve clocked trucks coming in here at close to 90 kilometres per hour and that’s just kind of normal," said Martel, who can hear the loud rumble made by trucks using their engine retarder brakes from his house — all day and all night.
He's asked the province to reduce the speed limit to 60 kilometres per hour and to change language on signage to say the use of engine retarder brakes is prohibited.
“A lot of the trucks will just absolutely ignore that and use their engine retarder brakes just to help them stop at the stop light," he said.
Not only are the brake noises bothering nearby residents, patients at a hospital adjacent to the intersection endure the grating sounds as well, said Mayor Jeff Craddock.
"The concern that we have as a town is the hospital, because right on that hill where it comes over is also the palliative wing for the hospital," he said. "In people’s last days, that’s a lot of noise and disruption."
Craddock says he's had discussions with the province about the issue.
In a statement to CTV News Edmonton, a spokesperson for the Ministry of Alberta Transportation and Economic Corridors said “there is no provincial legislation that regulates the use of engine retarder brakes along provincial highways or the noise emitted from them," adding that it is evaluating moving the sign warning of a speed limit reduction ahead by about 50 metres to give drivers more time to react to the change in speed limit.
They also said provincial highway regulations prohibit vehicles from "emitting any excessive noise" between 10 p.m. and 7 a.m.
“We’re going to try everything, whether it’d be language or a different type of sign, whatever, just to try and slow that down and take away the noise element," Craddock said.
CTVNews.ca Top Stories
Byelection results: Justin Trudeau handed his second byelection upset in recent months
Prime Minister Justin Trudeau has been handed his second byelection upset in recent months, as the Bloc Quebecois won LaSalle-Emard-Verdun, Que., a longtime Liberal seat in Montreal.
Watch out for texts offering free gifts — it's likely a scam
An Ontario man thought he got some good news when he received a text message offering a $30 gift for being a loyal Giant Tiger customer. 'I do go to that store so I clicked on the link and it said it was a customer appreciation award they were going to give people,' Mark Martin, of Simcoe, Ont., told CTV News Toronto.
Employee who called the Titan unsafe before fatal voyage to testify before U.S. Coast Guard
A key employee who labelled an experimental submersible unsafe prior to its last, fatal voyage was set to testify Tuesday before U.S. Coast Guard investigators.
GoFundMe cancels fundraiser for Ontario woman charged with spraying neighbour with a water gun
A Simcoe, Ont., woman charged with assault with a weapon after accidentally spraying her neighbour with a water gun says GoFundMe has now pulled the plug on her online fundraiser.
'Not that simple': Trump drags Canadian river into California's water problems
Republican presidential nominee Donald Trump promised "more water than you ever saw" to Californians, partly by tapping resources from a Canadian river.
Toxic chemicals used in food preparation leach into human bodies, study finds
More than 3,600 chemicals that leach into food during the manufacturing, processing, packaging and storage of the world's food supply end up in the human body — and some are connected to serious health harms, a new study found.
Sean 'Diddy' Combs is expected in court after New York indictment
Sean 'Diddy' Combs, the hip-hop mogul who has faced a stream of allegations by women accusing him of sexual assault, was arrested late Monday in New York after he was indicted by a federal grand jury.
A French man admits in court to drugging his wife so that he and dozens of men could rape her
A 71-year-old French man acknowledged in court Tuesday that he drugged his then-wife and invited dozens of men to rape her over nearly a decade, as well as raping her himself. He pleaded with her, and their three children, for forgiveness.
Body recovered from B.C. lake after unclothed man leads investigators to crash site
Mounties are investigating a fatal crash north of Whistler, B.C., after an unclothed man who was found along the side of the road led police to a pickup truck submerged in a lake with one occupant still inside.