December 31, 2012 in Region

Bus crash kills nine on icy Oregon highway

Charter was carrying tourists
 
Associated Press photo

Emergency personnel respond Sunday to the scene of a multiple-fatality accident after a tour bus careened through a guardrail along an icy highway and 100 fell feet down a steep embankment about 15 miles east of Pendleton, Ore., authorities said.
(Full-size photo)

Idaho man dies in rollover

 A 69-year-old Post Falls man died early Sunday in a one-vehicle accident on Interstate 84 in Eastern Oregon, about 35 miles west of the bus accident that happened about four hours later.

 The Oregon State Police said Freeman G. Thomason died at the scene, about 23 miles west of Pendleton, near Stanfield. Thomason was a passenger in a pickup truck driven by Timothy Hancock, 26, of Hermiston, Ore.

 Police reports say Thomason was wearing a safety restraint when the accident happened around 6:45 a.m.

 Hancock was driving eastbound on I-84 in the left lane when he lost control on an icy section of roadway. The pickup traveled into the center median and rolled before coming to rest on its top.

 Hancock received non-life-threatening injuries and was taken to a Hermiston hospital.

-Tom Sowa

PENDLETON, Ore. – A tour bus careened through a guardrail along an icy Oregon highway and 100 feet down a steep embankment Sunday, killing nine people and injuring more than 20 others, authorities said.

The charter bus carrying about 40 people lost control around 10:30 a.m. on snow- and ice-covered lanes of Interstate 84 in a rural area of Eastern Oregon, according to the Oregon State Police. The bus crashed near the start of a 7-mile section of road that winds down a hill.

The bus came to rest at the bottom of a snowy slope and landed upright, with little or no debris visible around the crash site.

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 had not yet spoken to police because of the severity of the injuries the driver had suffered.

Lt. Greg Hastings said the bus crashed along the west end of the Blue Mountains, west of an area called Deadman Pass. The area is so dangerous the state transportation department published specific warnings for truck drivers, advising it had “some of the most changeable and severe weather conditions in the Northwest” and can lead to slick conditions and poor visibility.

St. Anthony Hospital in Pendleton treated 26 people from the accident, hospital spokesman Larry Blanc said. Five of those treated at St. Anthony were transported to other facilities.

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, B.C., 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 the Associated Press that it owned the bus and said it was on a tour of the Western U.S. She declined to give her name.

A bus safety website run by the U.S. 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 spokesman for the American Bus Association said buses carry more than 700 million passengers a year in the United States.

“The industry as a whole is a very safe industry,” said Dan Ronan of the Washington, D.C.-based group. “There are only a handful of accidents every year. Comparatively speaking, we’re the safest form of surface transportation.”

The bus crash comes more than two months after another chartered tour bus in October veered off a highway 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.

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