Immediately following the crash, the
Ministry of Transportation (MTO) installed paved shoulders with
rumble strips and funded additional
police to patrol the highway, a move criticized as being insufficient. The Canadian Automobile Association's (CAA) manager of public and government affairs, Nick Ferris, noted that while the September 3 crash was about 16 kilometers west of the "Carnage Alley" notorious stretch, he stated that "The conditions are similar. It just widened the kill zone". The CAA hired traffic experts to study the section, whose findings called for the replacement of the grass median with an additional traffic lane per direction (for three lanes in each direction) separated by a concrete median barrier. A coroner's inquest into the crash led to 25 recommendations for safety improvements to the highway. These included increasing traffic enforcement and reintroducing
photo radar, as well as a review of safety standards for highway construction based on current data. Public outrage from the crash led Turnbull to announce a plan for safer roads, including improvements to the stretch of highway west of London. In 2004, a $322 million plan of road improvements began east of Windsor, which included fully paved shoulders and a concrete median barrier, both with
rumble strips, and reflective markers in curved sections. Construction on the improvements in
Carnage Alley was completed between Windsor and Tilbury in 2010. In 2009 the MTO conducted an environmental assessment to widen the stretch of Highway 401 between Tilbury and London to six lanes, but as of 2016 no significant highway improvements had been made, due to its rural nature and long distance as well as lack of traffic. However, the narrow grass median remained prone to crossover collisions, especially in bad weather. In 2017,
Chatham-Kent Conservative MPP Rick Nicholls questioned if "drivers might be avoiding Carnage Alley precisely because it is so dangerous?" Shortly afterwards the government announced plans to install a high-tension cable barrier in the grass median from Tilbury to
Ridgetown. Advocates viewed the government's response as inadequate, and delivered a petition signed by 3,000 residents to
Queen's Park demanding construction of a concrete barrier from Tilbury to London. In early 2018 the MTO committed to installing a concrete barrier on the stretch from Tilbury to London, with plans to install high-tension cables in the grass median as a short-term solution. The concrete barrier was completed from Tilbury to
Merlin Road in
Chatham-Kent in 2023. Plans to continue the barrier from Merlin Road to London were under engineering study as of 2024, coupled with plans to expand Highway 401 there. ==References==