The Welland Tribune

High school band bus plunges into ravine, killing driver in crash

40 students injured after leaving Disney World

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LOXLEY, ALA. — Members of a high school band heading home from Disney World, were jarred awake before dawn Tuesday when their Texas-bound bus ran off a highway and plunged into a ravine more than 15 metres deep.

The driver died and about three dozen others were hurt, mostly teenagers, authoritie­s said.

Interstate 10 was blocked for hours where the accident occurred between Mobile, Ala., and Pensacola, Fla.

The cause of the crash wasn’t immediatel­y known, but survivors from Channelvie­w High School in metro Houston described being asleep one moment and tumbling through the air the next.

“Then there was a loud, really huge crash that was presumably when the bus finally came to a stop,” Frances Dodson-Benson said after talking to her 15-yearold son DeWayne Benson.

“There were students on top of students, the bags, it was just a disarray, a lot of commotion, a lot of panic.”

First responders used ropes to rappel down the ravine in the middle of I-10 and then had to cut some of the students from the wreckage, said Baldwin County Sheriff Huey Hoss Mack.

The Channelvie­w Independen­t School District said 40 students and six adults from the school were on board the bus. State troopers said the driver was killed, and medical officials said at least 37 people, most of them teenagers, were treated at hospitals or other facilities in Pensacola and southwest Alabama for injuries that ranged from minor to very serious.

The sheriff said it wasn’t immediatel­y clear what caused the bus to enter the grassy median, which abruptly ends at a steep embankment where the interstate passes over Cowpen Creek. The crash happened at about

5:30 a.m., crunching the bus and leaving the passengers exposed to chilly temperatur­es.

Channelvie­w High’s graduates include University of Alabama quarterbac­k Jalen Hurts, who tweeted: “Wow, praying for everyone involved! #PrayforCha­nnelview.”

Josh Torres said his 17-year-old sister, Bianca Torres, was sitting at the rear of the bus when the impact of the wreck tossed her forward several rows. She had pain in her legs and bruising, but was otherwise unscathed, and taken to a hospital for evaluation, he said.

“All that she remembers is that she felt a bump, then a crash and then the bus flipping onto its side,” Torres said.

Dodson-Benson said her son, a sophomore who plays bass clarinet, used a borrowed phone to tell her he was OK.

Dodson-Benson said her son was sleeping when he was awakened by the bus hitting “some sort of hard bumps.”

Jesus Tejeda came upon the scene as he drove to work, finding dozens of police cars and ambulances stopped on the highway near the overpass. He looked down to see the bus lying on its side near the base of a concrete embankment, its front end crumpled.

Tejeda said he watched four people being removed from the wreckage, and couldn’t hear any yelling or sounds of panic.

“Thank God they were alive, but (they) had to take them on (a) helicopter,” he said in an interview conducted by instant messages.

Norman Haynes, of Victoria, Texas, said his daughter, 18-yearold trumpet player Makena Campa, was on the bus with her mother. He spoke with both of them after the crash and was on his way to the hospital.

“My daughter was really groggy because they had her on some very heavy pain medication,” he said. “They sounded kind of shook up. I think I’d be shook up as well.”

The interstate was closed in both directions as the injured were flown to hospitals including emergency rooms in Mobile and Pensacola, Fla., plus a freestandi­ng emergency room in rural Baldwin County, said

Chris Elliott, a Baldwin County commission­er.

“Everybody is being transferre­d to a hospital to at least be checked out,” said Elliott.

Torres said his brother, also a member of the Channelvie­w band, was on another bus not involved in the accident. That bus stopped after realizing what happened, but did not allow the students to get off, and eventually continued on toward Channelvie­w, a Houston suburb of about 38,000.

Outside their high school, still closed for spring break, police were stationed at every entrance and no one was available to speak.

Only hours before the crash, the band’s Facebook page had been updated to show a large group posing outside Disney World, where the band performed at a music festival Saturday.

Channelvie­w Independen­t School District spokespers­on Mark Kramer said officials were in contact with law enforcemen­t in Alabama to get more informatio­n.

The bus charter company,

First Class Tours Inc. of Houston, pledged to help local authoritie­s investigat­ing the crash in a statement that offered prayers for the injured and their families. The Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administra­tion gives the company a satisfacto­ry rating, meaning that records show no evidence of substantia­l non-compliance with safety requiremen­ts.

Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administra­tion records show that in the last two years, the carrier has been involved in four crashes prior to Tuesday’s crash, with one of those one involving one fatality.

The previous crash involving a fatality took place in May 2017 in Houston, when a bus failed to yield the right of way as it turned left and fatally struck a pedestrian in a crosswalk, according to a police report.

 ?? JESUS TEJADA THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? First responders search around a bus that plunged into a ravine early Tuesday on Interstate 10, at Loxley, Ala. Several people were on board, and all 46 were taken to 10 hospitals in Alabama and Florida.
JESUS TEJADA THE ASSOCIATED PRESS First responders search around a bus that plunged into a ravine early Tuesday on Interstate 10, at Loxley, Ala. Several people were on board, and all 46 were taken to 10 hospitals in Alabama and Florida.

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