The Southern Berks News

EXETER TWP. CRASH 4 hurt in Shelbourne Road collision

One vehicle was fire department crew heading to call; road closed six hours

- By Steven Henshaw MediaNews Group

Four people were injured Wednesday morning, Dec. 18, when an Exeter Township Fire Department vehicle collided with a heavyduty work truck during an emergency call in the township, police said.

The crash happened shortly after 8 a.m. on an icy stretch of Shelbourne Road near Wingspread Drive. The half-mile stretch south of the intersecti­on with Gibraltar Road was closed for six hours while an accident reconstruc­tion team investigat­ed.

Township Fire Chief Robert F. Jordan said two part-time paid firefighte­rs, Michael Roth and Edgar Weitzel, were taken by ambulance to Reading Hospital. Roth was released after receiving emergency department care but Weitzel was undergoing further tests.

Jordan said he visited both men in the hospital after the crash and they were both alert and talking.

Roth was driving the utility vehicle, called a quick response vehicle, or QRV, and they were heading to Route 422 and Walmart for a report of an unconsciou­s person, police said.

The fire department vehicle slid on a patch of ice and swiped a utility pole before crossing into the opposite lane and colliding with an oncoming Sensenig & Weaver Well Drilling truck, police said.

The fire crew called in the crash and reported they were trapped in the cab and injured. Another crew responded to free them.

The driver of the drilling company truck, Anthony Witmer, 41, of Terre Hill, Lancaster County, was also transporte­d to Reading Hospital along with his passenger, whose name wasn’t available, for unspecifie­d injuries.

A hospital official said Witmer wasn’t listed as a patient Wednesday afternoon, Dec. 18.

Jordan said his department was dispatched on several consecutiv­e emergency medical calls shortly before the crash.

“The situation leading up to the crash was unusual,” he said. “There were four or five calls right in a row. This vehicle at first was responding to a cardiac arrest, but EMS (medical command) diverted them to an unconsciou­s (person) at Walmart.

“Unfortunat­ely, that road is treacherou­s to begin with. In this case, it must have been icy much before this accident.”

The chief said he’s not sure why the icy condition wasn’t attended to.

“We’re doing our investigat­ion and looking at root cause and corrective action,” Jordan said. “Our first priority is that our members are being attended to.”

Jordan thanked the other department­s that responded to assist Exeter.

“There’s a lot of camaraderi­e within the emergency services and that was sure on display today,” he said.

 ?? BILL UHRICH— MEDIANEWS GROUP ?? The crash scene on Shelbourne Road on Dec. 18. Both vehicles sustained severe damage and two occupants in each vehicle required medical treatment.
BILL UHRICH— MEDIANEWS GROUP The crash scene on Shelbourne Road on Dec. 18. Both vehicles sustained severe damage and two occupants in each vehicle required medical treatment.

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