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The Spokesman-Review Newspaper
Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

Victims in accident were pastors, son

Concrete slab fell on truck Monday

In this undated photo provided by Pastor James Ludlow, Josh and Vanessa Ellis pose with their son Hudson at the EastPointe Foursquare Church in Bonney Lake, Wash., where the couple served as youth pastors. All three were killed Monday when a concrete slab fell from a highway overpass, crushing their vehicle as they drove under it. (Associated Press)
Ted S. Warren Associated Press

BONNEY LAKE, Wash. – A Washington couple who died when a large concrete slab fell from a highway overpass onto their pickup truck were youth ministers in their 20s and parents to a 6-month-old boy also killed in the freak accident.

Josh and Vanessa Ellis and their son, Hudson, died Monday when a chunk of concrete weighing thousands of pounds fell onto the cab of their truck as they drove underneath the span, said James Ludlow, their pastor at EastPointe Foursquare Church.

“It’s a tragic event,” Ludlow said Tuesday. “In the blink of an eye, inhale and exhale, and they’re in the presence of God.”

Construction crews were installing a sidewalk on the state Route 410 overpass in Bonney Lake, about 30 miles southeast of Seattle, when a concrete barrier fell to the roadway below about 10:30 a.m.

“We were just heading down the street … and I could hear three snaps and down it went on top of the truck,” Dawn Nelson, who was riding in a car behind the pickup, told Seattle television station KING. “There was nothing anyone could do. It was just surreal.”

It was not immediately known what caused the concrete barrier to fall. Bonney Lake police, the state Department of Transportation and representatives from contractor WHH Nisqually are investigating.

The material that fell was part of the original span, which was built in 1992 and has a sufficiency rating of 95.3 out of 100, city spokesman Woody Edvalson said.

Flowers, a cross and a teddy bear have been placed near the overpass, which has reopened along with the road underneath it. But debris from the concrete slab is still on the ground.

Ludlow described the Ellis family as “great people” who were loved by kids in the church’s congregation.

They were “the type of people everybody loves and gravitates to,” Ludlow said.

Shane Lance, another pastor at the church, said “our hearts ache … they were just really sweet, lighthearted people.”

Construction for a $1.8 million city sidewalk project to improve pedestrian access along the highway started about a month ago. WHH Nisqually had crews on scene Monday.