North Carolina

6 elementary students sent to hospital when school bus slams into building, NC cops say

A school bus with 18 elementary students inside hit a building on Oct. 12, North Carolina cops say.
A school bus with 18 elementary students inside hit a building on Oct. 12, North Carolina cops say. Alamance-Burlington School System

UPDATE: All of the injured students at UNC Hospital were discharged as of Monday, Oct. 16, an Alamance-Burlington School System spokesperson told McClatchy News in an email at 10 a.m.

This original story continues below.

Several elementary students were sent to the hospital after a bus crashed on its way to school in North Carolina, officials say.

A school bus on its way to B. Everett Jordan Elementary school smashed into a building early Thursday morning, Oct. 12, according to the Alamance-Burlington School System. Eighteen students were on the bus, and seven were injured in the crash, the school system said in a news release.

Law enforcement received a report at 7:16 a.m. that a school bus had crashed in Alamance County, about 50 miles northwest of Raleigh, according to a North Carolina State Highway Patrol news release. The bus was found smashed into a “wooden structure,” officials said.

While driving to school, the bus driver “traveled off the road to the right, struck a concrete driveway culvert” and stopped after hitting the wooden building, officials said. North Carolina Highway 87 near Judge Sharpe Road was closed for about three hours so state troopers could investigate the scene, according to the N.C. State Highway Patrol.

Multiple children were injured in the early morning bus crash near North Carolina Highway 87, officials said.
Multiple children were injured in the early morning bus crash near North Carolina Highway 87, officials said. Alamance-Burlington School System

Six of the seven children who were injured in the crash were sent to UNC Hospital, officials said, and the seventh student was “transported to a treatment facility for evaluation by their parent.”

The ten other students were picked up by family members at the crash site, an Alamance-Burlington School System spokesperson told McClatchy News. Families were notified within five minutes of the 911 crash call, he said.

Alamance-Burlington School System Superintendent Dain Butler said in an Oct. 12 statement that although the crash was an “unsettling event,” it showed “the care and humanity” of the local community as neighbors had come out to help.

“The compassion shown by the many individuals who assisted, comforted, and cared for our children is deeply moving,” he said. “Some of them sat with our students and wrapped them in blankets until EMS arrived.”

The bus crash investigation took around three hours to conduct, according to North Carolina State Highway Patrol.
The bus crash investigation took around three hours to conduct, according to North Carolina State Highway Patrol. Alamance-Burlington School System

The bus driver had minor injuries but wasn’t hospitalized, according to the N.C. State Highway Patrol. The 75-year-old was charged with failure to maintain lane control by state troopers.

He worked with Alamance-Burlington School System since 2010, the schools’ spokesperson said.

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This story was originally published October 12, 2023 at 1:29 PM.

Makiya Seminera
mcclatchy-newsroom
Makiya Seminera is a national real-time reporter for McClatchy News. She graduated from the University of Florida in May 2023. She previously was a politics reporting intern at The News & Observer in Raleigh, North Carolina, and The State in Columbia, South Carolina. She also served as editor-in-chief of UF’s student-run newspaper The Independent Florida Alligator in 2022.
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