Tour bus crashes in Utah, killing four
A bus carrying Chinesespeaking tourists careened off a road and crashed near Bryce Canyon National Park in Utah on Friday, killing at least four people and critically injuring at least another 12, authorities reported.
The cause of the crash, which occurred at about 11:30 a.m. on State Route 12 just west of the park, was under investigation, but weather did not appear to be a factor, state Highway Patrol and Garfield County Sheriff’s Department officials said.
A total of 30 people, including the driver, were aboard the bus when it ran off the road, rolled into a guard rail and flipped onto its side, sheriff’s spokeswoman Denise Dastrup said by telephone. All 26 people aboard who survived were injured, and were taken to various hospitals with injuries ranging from minor to life-threatening, she said.
The Highway Patrol said 12 to 15 people on the bus were critically injured. Dastrup said seven victims were initially listed as critical, and four of them were evacuated to hospitals by helicopter.
She said the passengers were all Mandarin Chinese speakers, and that county officials put out a call for Mandarin speakers to go to one of the local hospitals to assist in translation. The victims’ nationalities had not been immediately determined, officials said.
Highway Patrol spokesman Cpl. Chris Bishop said the passengers were all believed to be from mainland China or Taiwan, as opposed to being U.S. residents.
“This is pretty overwhelming for a little county of 4,900 people,” Garfield County Commissioner Leland Pollock told KSL-TV, a local NBC affiliate station. “This is just horrible for us, and we feel terrible for those who are injured and their families.”
Bishop said that based on the number of critically injured victims, it was possible the death toll would rise.
A 14-mile stretch of highway around the crash site was shut in both directions as authorities began investigating the cause of the accident, and it likely will remain closed “for some time,” Bishop said.
Bryce Canyon National Park, best known for its spired, multihued rock formations called hoodoos, remained open to visitors, though traffic to the park was restricted.