Medicine Hat woman says Coutts blockade kept family from their dying mother’s bedside
A Medicine Hat woman says the truckers’ blockade at the Coutts border crossing cost her family members the chance to say goodbye to their dying mother.
“They didn’t have the opportunity to be with their mom because of the protest and the blockade,” said Megan Allan today. “They would have made it if they could have got through. I understand that the truckers’ message is to be about freedom. But the protest affected my family’s freedom and my aunts will never get the chance to say goodbye.”
Allan said her aunts were on vacation in Arizona when their mother Alice Kanewischer took a turn for the worse. When they found out she didn’t have much left, says Allan, they booked the first flights to Great Falls that they could to pick up their vehicle and drive to Medicine Hat.
“My aunties landed at 9 o’clock on Monday evening in Great Falls. They were unable to get through the 24-hour border crossing at Coutts due to the blockade. The next closest border to us is the Wild Horse border that opened at 8 o’clock on Tuesday morning. My grandma passed away at 5:30 on Tuesday morning with my dad by her side. My aunts were unable to make it.”


