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Icy crash kills seven members of basketball team and one adult in N.B.

Last post Sun, Jan 13 2008, 11:17 AM by Bluegirl. 7 replies.
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  •  Sat, Jan 12 2008, 9:56 PM 326342

    • Allison
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    Icy crash kills seven members of basketball team and one adult in N.B.

    I just heard about this terrible tragic accident this afternoon when my neighbour called.  I found a few groups on facebook... and just read an article about it that I thought I'd share here.  I feel so bad for the parents/families/friends of those kids.  Bathurst is only an hour away from where I live.  My dad and I went out last night around the time of the accident, and the roads were really slippery (we took a cab).  It just makes you think... like how fast your life can change.  Soooo sad.  Sad  Anyway, here's the article:

    Icy crash kills seven members of basketball team and one adult in N.B.

    BATHURST, N.B. - A van carrying a high school boys' basketball team home from a game was only five minutes from waiting parents when it fish-tailed on a slippery highway and slammed into a tractor-trailer, killing seven players and one adult.

    Emily Cleland, sister of victim Nathan Cleland, said some parents had gathered at a fast-food restaurant to pick up their children who were expected at about 11:30 p.m. in this small northern New Brunswick city.

    But by midnight, when there was no sign of their white school van, families began to worry that something had gone wrong on the icy two-lane highway leading into Bathurst.

    Their fears were confirmed moments later when they got a call telling them to go to a hospital because there had been an accident.

    When they arrived, parents saw police and ambulances bringing in the four survivors.

    "My parents had seen the first two boys come in - one with a broken arm and the other with broken ribs - so they figured they had brought in the worst-case scenarios first and they weren't really worried," Cleland, 18, said from the family home.

    "And that's when they realized that the ambulances had stopped coming because the other ones had died on impact."

    The Bathurst High Phantoms were returning from a game in Moncton, N.B., about 220 kilometres away, when the accident occurred on Highway 8 outside Bathurst shortly after midnight.

    The force of the collision tore off the rear and a large piece of the passenger side of the large 15-seat van, and ejected benches and people everywhere. Hours later, the snow was still smeared with blood and littered with bits of plastic, lunch bags, debris and surgical gloves.

    "When members arrived at the scene, all eight were dead - there was nothing we could do," RCMP Sgt. Derek Strong said during a news conference later.

    "This was a very, very major impact."

    Strong said the road was icy at the time and the van's driver - a teacher at the school and also the team's coach - lost control. He survived but his wife, a teacher at another school who was supervising the team, was killed.

    Strong said officers who went to the accident scene were shaken by what they saw.

    "Police officers go to a lot of accident scenes but this one was above and beyond anything any of us are used to," he said.

    Strong said it appears no one was at fault in the accident.

    Twelve people were in the vehicle when it veered across the centre line and hit the truck. The van was equipped with seatbelts, but investigators didn't know if they were used.

    Calls then went out to families only telling them of the crash, not whether their child had been hurt.

    "My mother was notified by the police who told her to go to the hospital," said Carla Johnstone, whose 17-year-old brother Javier Acevedo was killed.

    "They sat her down and told her when they reached the scene of the accident he was the first body they saw and there was no sign of life. She had to identify the body at the morgue."

    Johnstone, 23, said Acevedo had called his mom about 15 minutes before the accident to let her know he was on his way back after the game, which the Phantoms lost 75 to 65 to Moncton High School.

    "He said, 'I'm OK, we're on our way, we're in Miramichi.'... He said he was coming home and not to worry."

    Lydia Dupere, a spokeswoman for the Acadie-Bathurst Health Authority, said three people were still in hospital with non-life-threatening injuries. A fourth person had been treated for injuries and released.

    The truck driver wasn't hurt.

    It had been snowing for most of the day in the Bathurst area, followed by a mix of snow and ice pellets, according to Environment Canada's website.

    Names of the victims had not been released, but many in the city of 12,500 quickly learned their identities and flocked to the school where grief counsellors and officials were offering help.

    Some families publicly spoke about their loved ones who were killed in the accident.

    Condolences were being posted on the school's website from people across the country, while a Facebook site set up to remember those killed had hundreds of members and photos of the teens by day's end.

    Many entries showed the smiling teens playing basketball or horsing around with friends.

    School superintendent John McLaughlin said students, parents and teachers began gathering at Bathurst High at 4 a.m.

    "This is a whole community in mourning," he said in an interview. "It's unthinkable what happened and everyone's trying to make some sense of it."

    A joint funeral for all seven boys was expected to be held Wednesday at a local civic centre.

    Cleland said her brother, who planned to take a year off after graduating in June and possible train to become a firefighter, had just turned 17 and was a point guard who averaged 20 points a game.

    "He loved life and loved living it to its fullest," she said. "He was such a funny and great guy. He loved any sport but he really loved basketball. He's been playing since he was four."

    Edward Kelly, whose grandson Nick Kelly was one of the victims, said the 15-year-old was an avid soccer goalie who excelled at school.

    "Nick was an A-1 student, he was an honour student, he loved sports, he was every parent's dream," he said. "His family is taking it not too well right now. It's pretty hard. It's a nightmare".

    Prime Minister Stephen Harper sent a letter of condolence to the school's principal, Coleen Ramsay.

    "The sudden loss of eight people in this unthinkable accident shocked the nation and all Canadians join you in mourning their passing," he said.

    "As a father, I particularly grieve with the parents who have lost their children. The seven promising young students will be missed dearly by their loved ones, fellow students, and the wider community of Bathurst."

    Bathurst Mayor Stephen Brunet, who once taught at the school, said he went to the high school and hospital shortly after the accident.

    "The families are bound to be still in shock," he said. "A few hours ago their children were happily playing basketball and now their lives are turned around in a matter of hours. It's unbelievable."

    Brunet said he saw the van's driver at the hospital, where they hugged and Brunet expressed his sorrow for what happened.

    "Not only did he lose his team but he lost his wife as well," Brunet said about his good friend and neighbour. "He's in a state of shock, not knowing what to say or do, just hugging the parents that came along."

    Ramsay said she was focusing on the needs of the students and families, adding that she was "dealing with a school in crisis."

    McLaughlin said Bathurst is a close-knit community, where "everybody pretty well knows everybody."

    "The students, for many of them, this is the first time they've ever had to face loss or death and to have to do that in a situation of this magnitude. It's unspeakable."

    McLaughlin said he knows many of the boys who died personally.

    "They were just such positive, high-energy, just typical all-Canadian boys, just wonderful kids, very well-liked, very personable and popular and very much leaders in their school," he added. "It's just a terrible tragedy."

    Doug Prescott, president of the New Brunswick Interscholastic Athletic Association and a longtime basketball referee, called the crash "a terrible tragedy."

    Prescott said he has known the Phantoms' head coach for years and knew some of the players through his capacity as a referee.

    "Bathurst High is always one of the most sportsmanlike teams in the province of New Brunswick and they represent themselves with extreme pride," he said. "It's always a pleasure to either see them play or referee them."

    -With files from Alison Auld, James Keller and Melanie Patten in Halifax

    http://canadianpress.google.com/article/ALeqM5gD3u7sV_MK6yBtyRE4W7wday6ftw


    "I'm just a soul whose intentions are good...
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  •  Sat, Jan 12 2008, 10:49 PM 326343 in reply to 326342

    • atticus
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    Re: Icy crash kills seven members of basketball team and one adult in N.B.

    My deepest heartfelt condolences go out to these families and friends of the departed....it is a truly devastating accident, and one that hits very close to home for me.

    When I first heard about this tragedy, I was almost paralized........it hits very close to home for me, although it was many years ago....My cousin, five of his friends and the drunk driver in the other car were all killed....it devastated the small town, and many, many families...actually, it wasn't until last year that my dad told me he was the one that had to go and identify his nephew...

    Still to this day, when the phone rings in the middle of the night (wrong number or what not) my heart still pounds beyond belief, for as long as I can remember, late at night phone calls mean nothing but bad news.

    My thoughts and prayers are with those that have lost love ones....

    A


    "What's the point in fighting when you know you've lost the war...."
  •  Sun, Jan 13 2008, 3:50 AM 326349 in reply to 326343

    • HazySoul
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    Re: Icy crash kills seven members of basketball team and one adult in N.B.

    I was still in bed listening to the radio this morning when I heard about this terrible accident & after the initial shock I thought of you Allison.  I am so glad you & your school were not a part of this horror.   I wasn't sure if Bathurst was in your area. 

    When I was in high school three boys were killed in a car accident and it devastated the whole community.  It is hard to come to terms with that kind of a loss. 

    Atticus I am sorry to hear about your cousin.  I can only imagine how awful it was for your Dad to have to identify his nephew at the morgue.  Sad

    My heart goes out to the families, the poor man who was driving and the entire community of Bathurst.  



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  •  Sun, Jan 13 2008, 8:53 AM 326355 in reply to 326349

    • Allison
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    Re: Icy crash kills seven members of basketball team and one adult in N.B.

    I'm really sorry to hear about what happened to your community atticus, and you too Torri.  I wonder if any of our students in Rogersville knew the boys from Bathurst.  I guess we'll find out on Monday morning.  Actually, on Friday afternoon, a bunch of our girls went up to the Bathurst area to play in a ringuette tournament.  If I was a parent, I'd be such a nervous wreck every time my kid had to travel for sports in the winter. 

    Man, it's just been a really strange year.  Earlier this year, 4 high school kids in Moncton were killed in a car accident... and again a few months ago, 4 more kids from the St-Louis/Richibuctou area were killed.  It breaks your heart to hear about stuff like that. 


    "I'm just a soul whose intentions are good...
    Oh Lord, please don't let me be misunderstood."
  •  Sun, Jan 13 2008, 9:00 AM 326356 in reply to 326349

    • Peter is not online. Last active: Sun, Jun 29 2008, 9:55 AM Peter
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    Re: Icy crash kills seven members of basketball team and one adult in N.B.

    What a terrible tragedy. My deepst condolences go out to the friends and families who lost loved ones in this terrible accident. So many promising young lives ended so quickly is very difficult to deal with, so my heart goes out to the entire community of Bathurst as well. Very sad.
  •  Sun, Jan 13 2008, 9:22 AM 326357 in reply to 326356

    • Sammie
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    Re: Icy crash kills seven members of basketball team and one adult in N.B.

    It is so sad when such young lives are lost. I can't even imagine the heartbreak of losing a child. It's too difficult to even consider. My heart goes out to the families, their friends & the community.
    Keep it simple

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    Until a little light gets through ~ Patty Griffin

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  •  Sun, Jan 13 2008, 10:25 AM 326360 in reply to 326357

    Re: Icy crash kills seven members of basketball team and one adult in N.B.

    What a sad story. I feel the same as Sammy, losing a child is just too terrifying to consider. My thoughts and prayers will be with the families and friends of these young lives lost.


    Recalculating....


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  •  Sun, Jan 13 2008, 11:17 AM 326363 in reply to 326360

    • Bluegirl
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    Re: Icy crash kills seven members of basketball team and one adult in N.B.

    This is an awful tragedy indeed. Sad It hits close to home for me as well because Bathurst is only an hour or so away from the town where I was born and raised. It's always sad to hear about such accidents, but even more heartbreaking when they involve young people... My thoughts and prayers are with the friends and families of the victims.

    Those 2 lane highways in Northern NB can be pretty scary in the winter time. I can certainly attest to that. We drove to Campbellton in an freezing rain storm on December 23rd to spend Christmas with my relatives and it was terrifying. That is no exaggeration. When you see large snowplows/salt trucks in the ditches, you know the roads are in bad shape. That's just the norm around there.

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