Bus driver is in good condition after Route 80 crash
by Julie O'Connor and Al Frank/The Star-Ledger
Saturday August 23, 2008, 3:48 PM
The driver of a tour bus that slid down an embankment along Route 80 on Friday remained hospitalized today, in good condition, a spokesperson said.
Everett Phillips, 48, was driving an Atlantic Express charter bus from Manhattan to Niagara Falls when it was clipped by another charter, then fell onto its side and slid down an embankment in Roxbury, Morris County.
About 80 passengers were aboard the two buses, but just two were admitted to Morristown Memorial Hospital, including Phillips, who suffered a back injury. Most other travelers walked away with scrapes and bruises.
No summonses have been issued, state police said.
Today, a representative from Hummingbird Tours of Deltona, Fla., the charter bus traveling behind Phillips, said its driver, Tommy Martin, 57, of Tampa, Fla., has not been involved in past accidents, but declined further comment.
Atlantic Express, which owns the charter bus driven by Phillips, could not be reached for comment.
The accident occurred at about 10:10 a.m. Friday after Phillips' bus braked for traffic and was clipped by as bus behind it, said Sgt. Julian Castellanos, a State Police spokesman.
The second bus, driven by Martin, continued across two lanes of Route 80, hitting a minivan that became wedged between the bus and a guardrail after it clipped the left rear of a tractor trailer.
Neither the minivan driver nor any of the 27 passengers aboard the second bus was hospitalized. They had been bound for the Poconos from New York.
The group on the toppled bus left Chinatown in Manhattan about an hour before the crash, which forced their bus over the concrete abutment of an overpass. It then flopped onto its right side and slid about 50 feet on a gradual slope, coming to a stop near Berkshire Valley Road.
The second bus stopped on the shoulder and was later towed while its 27 passengers were driven away on a replacement.
Of the 55 people on the first bus, 23 declined medical treatment and the rest were taken to area hospitals, Roxbury officials said. Most were discharged after treatment for bumps and bruises.
"It was a scary thing," said Vikram Mehta, 32, of Hartford, Conn, a passenger on the first bus. "We feel that we are lucky."