By FENIT NIRAPPIL and CHANNING JOSEPH
Associated Press
ORLAND, Calif. (AP) — A college visit by more than 40 high school students turned tragic when a FedEx tractor-trailer veered across a grassy highway median and slammed into their bus in a fiery wreck that left 10 people dead in Northern California, authorities said.
Someone kicked out a window on the bus, and many of those aboard squeezed through and ran for their lives Thursday to the other side of Interstate 5 before the vehicle exploded in flames.
The 44 teenagers aboard, nearly half from the Los Angeles school district, were participating in a program that invites prospective low-income or first-generation college students to visit Humboldt State University in far Northern California.
Steven Clavijo, a high school senior from Santa Clarita who planned to enroll at the school, was trying to catch a nap on the bus when he felt the vehicle begin to shake from left to right and then he heard a loud boom.
“We knew we were in major trouble,” he said.
After he escaped, two more explosions soon followed. Clavijo and other survivors looked on, knowing others were still trapped in the inferno.
Both drivers were killed, along with three adult chaperones and five teenage students, according to the California Highway Patrol.
Towering flames devoured both vehicles just after the crash, and clouds of smoke billowed into the sky until firefighters doused the fire, leaving behind scorched black hulks of metal. Bodies were draped in blankets inside the burned-out bus.
Most of the people who died were found on the ground in front of the bus or in the front portion of the bus, Glenn County Sheriff Larry Jones said. Identifying the victims might require the use of dental records or DNA, Jones said.
CHP Lt. Commander Bruce Carpenter said one person was seen running from the bus on fire. The person later died after being taken to a hospital, he said.
Three buses were traveling to the school, but only one was involved in the wreck, said Earl Perkins, assistant superintendent of operations for the Los Angeles schools district. The bus that crashed was traveling a few hours behind the other two.
Nineteen of the students on the bus were from the Los Angeles schools, Perkins said.
The National Transportation Safety Board sent a team to investigate.
“Every piece of paper associated with this will be looked at,” said Eric M. Weiss, an NTSB spokesman.
The California Highway Patrol said Friday investigators were looking into various factors to determine what caused the FedEx tractor-trailer to veer across the median and hit the bus.
Those factors include whether the FedEx driver fell asleep, experienced mechanical failure or lost control because of a separate collision on the southbound side of the freeway, Lt. Scott Fredrick said at a news conference. Authorities also will probe roadway and weather conditions.
“Since these are such in-depth, detailed investigations, we don’t expect to have a final report for a minimum of three months, 90 days,” Fredrick said. “It could take as long as six months depending on what the investigation entails.”
The crash happened a little after 5:30 p.m. on the interstate near Orland, a small city about 100 miles north of Sacramento.
The bus was among three the university had chartered as part of its two-day Preview Plus program to bring prospective students from Southern California and the San Francisco Bay Area to tour the Arcata campus, according to university officials. The other two buses made it to campus, and the university was providing those students with counseling.
Traci Ferdolage, an associate vice president for the university, said the Preview Plus program is designed for students planning to addend Humboldt State and others who are still undecided.
“This is a way for them to connect to the university early,” Ferdolage said. “We like them to show up and be connected so they can be successful.”
The bus was owned by Silverado Stages, a tour bus company based in San Luis Obispo. The company said in a statement on its website Thursday night that it was assisting authorities in gathering information.
“Our top priority is making sure that the injured are being cared for,” the company said.
Crisis counselors were also being made available at Los Angeles schools.
Sabrina Garcia, a high school senior from Los Angeles, said she decided to postpone the tour because she had a school project to complete.
“I was devastated when I heard about the crash, and relieved that I didn’t attend,” Garcia said. “I can’t imagine how those kids feel. You think you’re going somewhere safe with your school — and you end up in an accident.”
A CHP dispatcher says the bus and truck were on opposite sides of the freeway when the truck crossed the median and slammed into the bus, causing an explosion and fire.
Investigators say the truck driver might have been trying to avoid a passenger car that was also involved in the crash, which shut down north and southbound traffic on the freeway.
“There was a small white sedan in front of the truck,” California Highway Patrol Officer Lacy Heitman said. “The FedEx vehicle did sideswipe the sedan before it crossed the median.”
No one in the car was injured.
A first responder who helped set up a triage at the scene said 36 or 37 people were hurt, with injuries that included burns, broken legs and noses and head lacerations.
“The victims were teenage kids. A lot of them were freaked out. They were shocked. They still couldn’t grasp what happened,” said Jason Wyman of the Orland Volunteer Fire Department.
One of the victims was identified Friday by the Sacramento County Coroner’s Office as Arthur Arzola, 26, of Rancho Cucamonga, Calif. He died at the University of California, Davis Medical Center in Sacramento.
Eleven people were taken to Enloe Medical Center in Chico. Two of those patients were listed in critical condition Friday morning, the hospital said.
At least seven people were hospitalized at other facilities. Two of them were in critical condition and five others in fair condition.
Eight crash survivors spent the night at the American Red Cross shelter in Orland, said Jordan Scott, a Red Cross spokesman.
“We’re trying to look out for their mental well-being,” Scott said. “It’s obviously a tragedy for a lot of these kids.”
A FedEx spokeswoman said the company was cooperating with authorities as they investigate.
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Joseph reported from San Francisco. Associated Press photographer Rick Pedroncelli in Orland, Associated Press writers Lisa Leff, Scott Smith and Sudhin Thanawala in San Francisco and Daisy Nguyen and Tami Abdollah in Los Angeles contributed to this story.
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