US tour bus crashed along dangerous strip
2012-12-31 19:28
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2012-12-28 11:44
After the bus accident at Bloemfontein authorities warn for the dangers of driving fatigue.WATCH
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Pendleton - The stretch of rural Oregon interstate where
a tour bus crashed through a guardrail and plummeted 30.5m down a steep
embankment is so notorious that state transportation officials have published a
specific advisory warning of its dangers.
Nine people were killed and more than two dozen injured
when the charter bus veered out of control around 10:30 on Sunday on snow- and
ice-covered lanes of Interstate 84 in eastern Oregon, according to the Oregon
State Police.
The bus crashed near the start of a 11km section of road
that winds down a hill.
It came to rest at the bottom of a snowy slope, landing
beaten and battered but upright with little or no debris visible around the
crash site.
The East Oregonian said it spoke with two South Korean
passengers, ages 16 and 17.
Both said through a translator that they were seated near
the rear of the bus when it swerved a few times, hit the guardrail and flipped.
They described breaking glass and seeing passengers
pinned by their seats as the bus slid down the hill. Both said that they feared
for their lives.
The paper said that the teens, one of whom injured a knee
and the other suffered a broken collarbone, were staying at a hotel arranged by
the Red Cross.
More than a dozen rescue workers descended the hill and
used ropes to help retrieve people from the wreckage in freezing weather. The
bus driver was among the survivors, but was injured and had not yet spoken to
police.
Lieutenant Gregg Hastings said the bus crashed along the
west end of the Blue Mountains, and west of an area called Deadman Pass.
The area is well known locally for its hazards, and the
state transportation department advises truck drivers that "some of the
most changeable and severe weather conditions in the Northwest" can lead
to slick conditions and poor visibility.
Drivers are urged to use "extreme caution and
defensive driving techniques", and warned that snow and black ice are
common in the fall through the spring.
The bus had been carrying about 40 people.
Survivors
St Anthony Hospital in Pendleton treated 26 of them, said
hospital spokesperson Larry Blanc. Five of those treated at St Anthony were
transported to other facilities.
Blanc did not elaborate on the nature of the injuries but
told the Oregonian that the hospital brought in additional staff to handle the
rush of patients and did a lot of X-ray imaging.
I-84 is a major east-west highway through Oregon that
follows the Columbia River Gorge.
Umatilla County Emergency manager Jack Remillard said the
bus was owned by Mi Joo travel in Vancouver, British Columbia, and state police
said the bus was en route from Las Vegas to Vancouver.
A woman who answered the phone at a listing for the
company confirmed with AP that it owned the bus and said it was on a tour of
the Western US She declined to give her name.
A bus safety website run by the US Department of
Transportation said Mi Joo Tour & Travel has six buses, none of which have
been involved in any accidents in at least the past two years.
A spokesperson for the American Bus Association said
buses carry more than 700 million passengers a year in the US.
"The industry as a whole is a very safe
industry," said Dan Ronan of the Washington, DC,-based group.
"There are only a handful of accidents every year.
Comparatively speaking, we're the safest form of surface transportation."
Sunday's Oregon bus crash comes more than two months
after another chartered tour bus veered off a highway in October in northern
Arizona, killing the driver and injuring dozens of passengers who were mostly
tourists from Asia and Europe.
Authorities say
the driver likely had a medical episode.
- AP