The Guardian (USA)

Three dead after semi-truck hits bus carrying students on Ohio highway

- Associated Press in Etna, Ohio

A charter bus carrying students from a high school was rear-ended by a semitruck on an Ohio highway on Tuesday morning, leaving three people dead and 15 others injured, according to an emergency official.

Five vehicles were involved in the crash, including a Pioneer Trails charter bus that was transporti­ng students from the Tuscarawas Valley local school district in eastern Ohio, said Sean Grady, Licking county’s emergency management agency director. There were a total of 57 people onboard, he said.

Lt Nathan Dennis of the Ohio state highway patrol confirmed that people were killed in the crash and said “18 people were taken from the bus (overall),” including 15 children, but he declined to specify how many deaths had occurred and declined further comment since authoritie­s were still notifying the victims’ families.

The bus was carrying Tuscarawas Valley students and chaperones to an Ohio School Boards Associatio­n conference in Columbus, said Derek Varansky, the superinten­dent.

“Right now, our focus is on getting in touch with our Tusky Valley families who had loved ones on the bus and providing support to our entire school community,” Varansky said in a Facebook post.

The conference was canceled after organizers learned of the crash.

“Given this devastatin­g news, we have canceled our conference. Right now, our focus is on providing support to Tuscarawas Valley. That includes making grief counselors from our trade show available,” said Jeff Chambers, the associatio­n’s director of communicat­ion services.

The accident occurred shortly before 9am on Interstate 70 West in Licking county, near the Smoke Road underpass and about 26 miles (42km) east of Columbus. The cause was not immediatel­y known.

The injured were being treated at seven hospitals.

In a statement, Pioneer Trails, the charter bus company, confirmed there was an incident involving one of its buses on Tuesday morning.

“Pioneer is fully cooperatin­g with the authoritie­s as we work to find the cause of the accident,” the company’s statement said. “Our thoughts and prayers go out to all of those impacted by this accident. As this is an ongoing investigat­ion, there will be no further comments.”

The American Red Cross of Central and Southern Ohio said it fulfilled a request for more blood from one hospital in the area, sending 30 units to a hospital in the Mount Carmel Health System, said Marita Salkowski, regional communicat­ions director. A center was set up at a United Methodist church in Etna for bus passengers not in need of medical attention to go to and contact loved ones, she said.

Numerous emergency responders were at the scene, and Ohio department of transporta­tion cameras from the area showed smoke coming from the crash site. Police officers were blocking the entrance ramps to I-70 East and West near the scene of the accident, increasing traffic along the road leading to the interstate. Dozens of emergency response vehicles were still at the scene of the accident several hours after it occurred.

Mickey Lymon, an investigat­or with the Licking county coroner’s office, said his office had been called to the scene, but deferred other questions to the state police.

“This is our worst nightmare, when we have a bus full of children involved in a crash,” said Ohio’s governor, Mike DeWine, during a news conference at the scene. “Prayers go out to the families, everyone who was on the bus.”

It was the second recent fatal crash involving high school students on a charter bus. In September, two people were killed and several others injured when a charter bus carrying high school students to band camp veered off a New York highway.

 ?? Photograph: Barbara Perenic/AP ?? Both directions of Interstate 70 are closed in Licking county, Ohio, after a fatal accident on Tuesday.
Photograph: Barbara Perenic/AP Both directions of Interstate 70 are closed in Licking county, Ohio, after a fatal accident on Tuesday.

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