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Salcha man killed in collision with Black Gold ore-hauling truck

A Black Gold Transport double-dump tractor trailer like this collided this morning near Richardson Highway milepost 332 with a four-door sedan, killing the driver.
Black Gold Transport
A Black Gold Transport double-dump tractor trailer like this collided this morning near Richardson Highway milepost 332 with a four-door sedan, killing the driver.

Kinross, Black Gold Transport offer 'thoughts and prayers'; ore-trucking foes say 'it's not worth the risk'

A Salcha man was killed Monday when the vehicle he was driving was struck by a double-trailer gold-ore haul truck on the Richardson Highway south of Eielson Air Force Base. Salcha Fire and Rescue Chief Ricky Holland said the call came in early.

“So we were dispatched at 6:25 a.m. for a motor-vehicle accident of a semi versus a car,” he said Monday. “It was one of the Black Gold ore trucks.”

That’s about when Alaska State Troopers also got a report of the collision around milepost 332, near the intersection of Tom Bear Trail. Holland said he asked for help from Eielson’s fire department while on his way to the wreck.

“I requested a rescue from Eielson,” he said, “and they sent me a rescue, an engine and an ambulance.”

A Trooper dispatch says an investigation showed the driver of a four-door sedan failed to stop at the intersection and when he entered the highway the vehicle was struck by the Black Gold Transport truck. Holland says it turns out the ambulance wasn’t needed transporting victims.

Diagram shows dimensions of large trucks Kinross Alaska and its partner, Contango Ore, are using to haul gold ore 250 miles from their Manh Choh mine near Tetlin to Kinross's mill near Fox.
Kinross Alaska
Diagram shows dimensions of large trucks Kinross Alaska and its partner, Contango Ore, are using to haul gold ore 250 miles from their Manh Choh mine near Tetlin to Kinross's mill near Fox.

“No transport,” he added.

Troopers identified the victim as 42-year-old Temitayo Iyanu Kalejaiye. He was pronounced dead at the scene, and his body was being sent to the State Medical Examiner’s office for autopsy.

A Trooper spokesperson said one of the lanes on the Richardson was closed for about five hours. He said the truck wasn’t loaded with ore. That’s because it was southbound -- headed to Tetlin for another load. A Kinross spokesperson said Monday that Black Gold Transport trucks make the equivalent of 60 round trips every day. The trucking operation is expected to last about four more years.

Black Gold Transport: truck was traveling under 65 mph

Fairbanks-based Black Gold Transport has been contracted by Kinross Alaska and its partner Contango Ore to haul gold ore from the Manh Choh mine near Tetlin to the Kinross mill near Fox. Black Gold said in a social media post Monday that the truck was traveling at 63 miles an hour in a 65-mile-an-hour speed limit zone. And it said Black Gold is cooperating with Troopers’ ongoing investigation.

The company said in a prepared statement Monday that read in part “our thoughts and prayers are with the occupants of both vehicles and their families.”

Kinross Alaska also issued a statement Monday that reads, “We are devastated by today’s crash. Our thoughts and prayers remain with all who have been impacted and we extend our condolences to the drivers and their families.”

An organization that opposes Kinross’s ore-hauling operation shared condolences for the families of the victim and the truck driver in a statement it issued later Monday.

“We are heartbroken to hear about the loss of a neighbor and fellow citizen who was killed when their vehicle was struck by a Black Gold Transport ore hauler this morning on the Richardson Highway.”

Patrice Lee is a member of Advocates for Safe Alaska Highways. She relayed the statement to KUAC Monday afternoon.

“While we know it is never, ever a truck driver's intent to cause harm and that they are fully aware of the inherent risks of operating such large vehicles, We are disappointed that these gigantic trucks are allowed to use the same roads to haul industrial loads of ore as our smaller vehicles, school buses, bicycles, and pedestrians, to haul mostly industrial waste.”

Lee reiterated the organization’s ongoing opposition to Kinross using Black Gold’s 82-ton trucks to make the 250-mile trip from the mine to the mill through busy communities along the Alaska, Richardson and Steese highways. The trucks began hauling late last year.

“We maintain that this ore haul simply is not worth the risk,” she said. “One accident resulting in any loss is one too many. We cannot turn back the clock but we can let reason prevail. Our public roads, meant for the traveling public and commerce are not intended or safe for industrial ore hauls.”

A Trooper investigation into the fatal wreck continues.

Editor’s note: This story has been updated.

News
Tim Ellis has been working as a KUAC reporter/producer since 2010. He has more than 30 years experience in broadcast, print and online journalism.