SBF 70 years logo
MenuMENU
SearchSEARCH

The lessons of 35W

At press time, the death toll in the collapse of the Interstate 35W bridge in Minneapolis was still climbing. More than a week after the Aug. 1 disast...

by Steve Hirano, Editor/Associate Publisher
September 1, 2007
3 min to read


At press time, the death toll in the collapse of the Interstate 35W bridge in Minneapolis was still climbing. More than a week after the Aug. 1 disaster, Navy divers recovered two bodies from the Mississippi River, increasing the number of fatalities to eight.

Considering the catastrophic nature of the bridge’s failure and the number of vehicles on the bridge at the time, I believe the death toll was remarkably low. The families of those killed in the tragedy would probably disagree, but there are times when you should be thankful that more pain, suffering and loss wasn’t accrued.

Ad Loading...

Which brings me around to the school bus on the bridge. This vehicle was carrying 62 people when the concrete gave way. It plunged an estimated 30 or 40 feet down to the river bank in three stages. The fact that no one on board was killed is a minor miracle, perhaps owing to the general sturdiness of school buses or perhaps just to good fortune.

Heroes played key role
But credit must also go to those who helped evacuate the more than 50 children on the bus, which was headed back from a swimming trip organized by a social services group. Those heroes included staff members of the social services group and passers-by.

One of the staff people, Jeremy Hernandez, realizing that the service door was pinned shut against the guardrail, broke open the rear emergency exit and started the evacuation. In a taped interview, Hernandez described the scene: “The kids were screaming, ‘We’re going to go into the river!’ so I jumped over the seats, went to the back door, kicked the coolers out, turned around and started throwing kids off the bus.”

Another hero was Gary Babineau, whose truck was on the bridge when it collapsed. He said he was fleeing the scene when he heard screams and crying coming from the school bus. He ran over to assist, lowering children from the bridge to the road below.

Babineau told a Minneapolis radio station that the children who were evacuated from the bus were so confused and terrified that they wanted to get off the bridge immediately, even though it was safer to walk farther down the bridge, where the elevation was 7 or 8 feet instead of 15. “They were so shaken up that they weren’t listening,” he said. Had they fallen off the bridge at the greater height, they could have been more badly injured during the evacuation than in the bridge collapse itself.

Ad Loading...

Evacuation drills are essential
Key to this discussion, then, is the importance of evacuation training. In the bridge collapse, the bus driver was incapacitated. Would your passengers know how to open the emergency door? How about a roof hatch? Would they know where to congregate and how to summon assistance?

Also, are you providing evacuation instructions to passengers who might not ride the bus regularly? According to Charlie Hood, Florida state pupil transportation director, his state requires the transporter to read an FAA-style evacuation script to passengers before every field and activity trip. This is a great idea.

In the bridge collapse, there were coolers on the bus. It’s important that any coolers, luggage or other large items be secured between the seats. As you may recall, some of the victims in the 1988 Carrollton, Ky., school bus fire died because the aisle was blocked by coolers and other large objects.

The 35W bridge collapse reminds us that emergencies can arise anywhere, without warning. More emphasis on evacuation drills and training is the proper response. We need to be lucky and good.

 

Subscribe to Our Newsletter

More Safety

The 5th-generation Waymo Driver on the all-electric Jaguar I-PACE.
Safetyby StaffMarch 5, 2026

NTSB Determines Human Error Led to Waymo’s Illegal School Bus Passing

Investigators reported a remote assistance error allowed a Waymo driverless vehicle to illegally pass a stopped school bus in Austin.

Read More →
The side of a school bus with a retracted stop signal.
Safetyby Elora HaynesMarch 4, 2026

National Action Plan Aims to End Illegal School Bus Passings Across the U.S.

See how a new 50-state roadmap outlines 69 strategies for districts, law enforcement, and policymakers to reduce the 39 million illegal school bus passings reported each year.

Read More →
A school bus graphic with text reading "Iowa Student Killed, 14 Injured in Oklahoma Bus Crash."
Safetyby StaffMarch 3, 2026

11-Year-Old Student Dies After Falling Under School Bus

Recently, an Iowa student died after falling under a school bus, while 14 Oklahoma students were injured days later when a semi-truck rear-ended their bus.

Read More →
Ad Loading...
school bus driver
SponsoredMarch 2, 2026

7 Key Criteria for Choosing a School Bus Fleet Technology Partner

Download this white paper for clear guidance on evaluating your organization’s needs and selecting a partner who delivers long-term value.

Read More →
Graphic of a yellow school bus above the headline “The Real Cost of Downtime,” with icons illustrating overtime costs, frustrated parents and administrators, repair expenses, and route delays, emphasizing the operational and financial impact of communication failures in school transportation fleets.
SponsoredMarch 2, 2026

The Real Cost of Bus Fleet Downtime

When school bus communication systems fail, the consequences extend far beyond equipment repairs. Downtime can increase safety risks, strain dispatch operations, and erode driver confidence. Explore how proactive radio lifecycle management and managed services are reducing disruptions, supporting driver retention, and delivering predictable budgeting for school transportation fleets.

Read More →
Graphic showing the EverDriven logo and “SafeOps Council Launches” text over an image of a vehicle driving on a curved road, with School Bus Fleet branding in the corner.
Safetyby News/Media ReleaseFebruary 25, 2026

EverDriven Launches New Council to Standardize Safety Across 36 States

EverDriven has launched a new safety council aimed at standardizing and strengthening student transportation practices across all states it operates in.

Read More →
Ad Loading...
a photo of a school bus driving down a suburban street with houses in the background and green grass pictured
Safetyby News/Media ReleaseFebruary 23, 2026

Thomas Built Buses Awards “If You Pass” Safety Campaign Funds to Ga. District

The OEM's three-week campaign during National School Bus Safety Week has awarded nearly $6,000 to Bryan County Schools to support increasing student safety around the bus.

Read More →
Kids need more from a driverless ride graphic comparing “Getting from A to B” vs “Student Transportation,” with a Waymo-style autonomous car image and School Bus Fleet logo.
SafetyFebruary 11, 2026

Autonomous Vehicles Aren’t Built for Student Transportation [Op-Ed]

Driverless cars may feel the future, but student transportation requires more than navigation. Here’s why it demands human judgment, empathy, and oversight.

Read More →
Graphic showing the front of a yellow school bus with cracked-glass overlay and headline reading “Fatal School Bus Hit & Run in New York,” dated February 5, 2026, alongside the School Bus Fleet logo.
Safetyby Staff and News ReportsFebruary 10, 2026

New York Girl Killed by School Bus Hit & Run

An 11-year-old in Brooklyn was killed crossing the street. Meanwhile, the school bus driver faces misdemeanor charges after he left the scene.

Read More →
Ad Loading...
2026 Disaster Response Guide Call for Experts is Open.
Safetyby StaffFebruary 9, 2026

Disaster Readiness Starts Before the Storm [Call for Experts]

The 2026 Disaster Response Guide is officially underway, and we’re now opening a Call for Insights and Experts.

Read More →