MEC&F Expert Engineers : 05/23/15

Saturday, May 23, 2015

SMALL PLANE CRASH IN CALEDONIA, MISSOURI. ELDERLY PILOT INJURED





MAY 23, 2015

CALEDONIA, MISSOURI

A single engine plane crashed in a field at the southern edge of Caledonia Saturday afternoon.
According to Washington County Sheriff Andy Skiles, an elderly pilot left the Fredericktown airport en route to Farmington when he got lost and ran out of fuel.
Witnesses said they heard the plane's engine cut-out shortly before the crash.
The Sheriff says the pilot suffered a broken leg and a broken arm.
The FAA was contacted, but Skiles says there will be no investigation.

Source: http://www.mymoinfo.com

Yeager Airport sues 20 companies involved with the design and construction of its runway extension project over landslide. Triad Engineering and Cast & Baker are the main defendants.




Yeager Airport is suing 20 companies involved with the design and construction of its runway extension project, which collapsed in a massive landslide in March, alleging negligence and breach of contract and seeking to recover millions of dollars in compensation and punitive damages.

The airport filed suit Friday against Triad Engineering, the firm that designed the man-made hillside that supported the runway extension, and Cast & Baker, the contractor that led construction on the project.

The airport also sued a Pennsylvania-based blasting company, a Dunbar-based paving company, the companies that designed and installed the EMAS blocks used on the runway extension, the company that makes the geo-synthetic mesh that held the hillside together and a Pennsylvania-based quality-control company that also were involved in the project.

Also included in the lawsuit are the airport’s two insurance companies, AIG Aerospace and New Hampshire Insurance Co., and the insurers of every company involved with the runway extension project.

The airport alleges that the runway extension and the man-made hillside that supported it were improperly designed, improperly tested, not properly inspected and not properly monitored.

After years of slight shifts, the hillside, which was completed in 2007, collapsed in March, destroying homes and a church on Keystone Drive, in Charleston, and forcing the evacuation of more than 100 people.

“The event in question is of a kind which ordinarily does not occur in the absence of negligence,” Yeager’s attorneys write in the lawsuit, filed in Kanawha County Circuit Court. “The work and services provided by defendants was not performed with ordinary skill, care or diligence.”

The airport hired lawyers from three local firms, Scott Segal, Timothy Bailey and Anthony Majestro, to file the lawsuit jointly on its behalf.

The lawsuit says airport personnel noticed separation in the EMAS blocks on July 28, 2013, although there were related problems going back to at least 2010. The airport says it immediately contacted Triad and Cast after noticing the separation, but the two firms said they did not think there was a problem.

“In fact, defendant Triad informed the [Airport] Authority that settlement of as much as 24 inches was within normal range,” the lawsuit states.

As the blocks continued to separate, the airport and Triad each conducted monitoring and surveying.

The airport held an emergency board meeting on March 11, the day before the slide, at which, the lawsuit alleges, a Triad representative said the chances of a hillside collapse were “very slight.”

“Less than 24 hours after being told the chances of a catastrophic failure were slight, the Runway 5 EMAS . . . catastrophically failed, sending hundreds of thousands of cubic yards of fill and other material cascading down,” the lawsuit states. “The damages suffered by the residents of Keystone Drive and the Authority total in the millions of dollars.”

Majestro said attorneys filed the lawsuit Friday because a law that takes effect Tuesday will make it more difficult for plaintiffs to collect damages when some liable defendants don’t have the ability to pay.

“The airport is anxious to have this dispute resolved because they want the runway fixed and the landowners below them, whose properties were destroyed, taken care of,” Majestro said.

Circuit clerks around the state were sent a letter early Friday warning them about the possibility of an unusually large number of filings throughout the day because of the new law (HB2002).

Matt Arrowood, director of circuit clerk services for the West Virginia Supreme Court, wrote the letter after attorneys raised concerns about possible long lines at the time courthouses are set to close.

“Administrative Director of the Courts Steve Canterbury has advised that all people who wish to file and who are in line at the close of business at your office should be considered as having filed on Friday in a timely manner — even if they have not reached your counter by the end of your business day,” Arrowood wrote.

Majestro, who also is president of the West Virginia Association of Justice, spoke out against changing the law during the legislative session.

“In my opinion, it doesn’t apply to conduct that occurred prior to Tuesday,” he said. “However, if you’ve got a case ready to file, we’ve advised attorneys to go ahead and file it. That way they don’t have to worry about that argument.”

The lawsuit filed by Yeager has been assigned to Circuit Judge Tod Kaufman.

Source: http://www.wvgazette.com

1 CHILD KILLED, SEVERAL PEOPLE INJURED IN GURNEE, ILLINOIS CRASH. THE DRIVER, SILVIA JACOB, WAS CITED FOR IMPROPER LANE USAGE AND CHILD RESTRAINT VIOLATIONS.







MAY 23, 2015

GURNEE, ILLINOIS

Illinois State Police have confirmed two children were ejected from a car following an accident Saturday morning at I-94 near Gurnee, Ill. One of those children has died.

A family friend identified the fatal victim as Reeve Matthew, 10. His cousin, 11-year-old Blessen Zachariah, is in serious condition.

The family was on a church outing, heading to Holy Hill church in Wisconsin. Police say a Lincoln Navigator hit a wall at 9:35am on I-94 northbound near mile post 12 in Gurnee. Upon impact the two children were ejected from the rear window of the car and onto the shoulder.

The car then crossed all lanes of traffic stopping on the right shoulder. There were a total of seven people inside the car.

The other five injuries were non-life threatening. The accident is still under investigation.

All I-94 northbound lanes near Gurnee were closed due to the accident, but later reopened.

According to the Illinois State Police, none of the children were wearing seat belts. The driver, Silvia Jacob, was cited for improper lane usage and child restraint violations.

Jacob is Reeve’s aunt.
Source: http://wgntv.com

Multi-vehicle wreck in Rowlett, Texas leaves at least 1 dead, several injured



ROWLETT, TEXAS

Rowlett police said at least one person was killed and others were injured Saturday night in a major accident on Interstate 30 near the Horizon Road exit in front of the Trend Tower office building.

Wet weather is believed to be a factor in the wreck, which shut down traffic on the busy highway for hours.

The police department said the 6:30 p.m. wreck involved several 18-wheelers and passenger cars.

Police said a westbound big rig crossed through the concrete median barrier into the eastbound lanes, "causing further collisions." Witnesses said it was raining hard at the time.

"The accident resulted in one confirmed fatality," the department said on Facebook. "Other drivers were transported to local hospitals for treatment."
The identities of the victims have not been released.

Eastbound traffic on I-30 remained closed more than three hours after the accident.

"Lane closures will be anticipated for an extended period of time due to the size of the accident scene and the ongoing investigation," police said.


1 MAN KILLED, 1 INJURED IN FIERY SEMI-TRAILER TRUCK ACCIDENT ON I-80 IN IOWA CITY WHEN IT CRASHED INTO A BRIDGE SUPPORT AND BURST INTO FLAMES












MAY 22, 2015

IOWA CITY, IOWA

One man died after the semi-trailer truck he was in collided Friday with the supports of the Dubuque Street bridge on Interstate 80 in Iowa City.

According to a crash report from the Iowa State Patrol, a semi-trailer truck carrying steel was westbound on I-80 near exit 244 at about 8:15 a.m. when it crashed into a bridge support and burst into flames.

Gary A. Griffey, 39, of Lafayette, Ind., a passenger in the semi-trailer truck, died from his injuries. Griffey was not wearing a seat belt, according to the report.

The driver of the semi-trailer truck, Shawn C. Freeman, 24, of Plattsmouth, Neb., was injured in the accident, according to the report, but not critically. Freeman was wearing a seat belt. Both men were transported to University of Iowa Hospitals and Clinics by ambulance, where Griffey later died.

Iowa State Patrol Lt. Randy Jones said Friday afternoon that the semi-trailer truck drove through a guard rail and into the bridge's supports and became engulfed in flames. Witnesses at the scene said they heard explosions after the accident, Coralville Fire Chief Dave Stannard said.

Smoke from the burning semi-trailer truck could be seen from miles away until fire crews from Iowa City and Coralville extinguished the flames just after 8:30 a.m.

The accident shut down Dubuque Street over the bridge and all lanes of Interstate 80.

The Dubuque Street bridge was closed for about two hours due to concerns about the bridge's structural integrity after the semi-trailer truck hit it. Iowa City Manager Tom Markus said officials with the Iowa Department of Transportation checked the bridge and deemed it safe for vehicles about 9:50 a.m.

Eastbound and westbound lanes of I-80 around the 244 exit were closed after the accident, with traffic being diverted onto Dubuque Street. Eastbound I-80 was reopened at about 8:40 a.m., with westbound lanes reopening just after noon.
Source: http://www.press-citizen.com

CALIFORNIA PROBE FAULTS TRUCK DRIVER IN FATAL BUS COLLISION THAT KILLED 10






MAY 22, 2015

LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA

The California Highway Patrol faulted a semi-truck driver Friday for a fiery head-on collision with a bus that killed 10, but officials said they still don't know why his big rig veered across an interstate median and into oncoming traffic, killing five high school students on their way to visit a college and a couple who had just gotten engaged.

The underlying cause of the crash is the FedEx semi-truck driver, Tim Evans, 32, "allowing his vehicle to travel across the median in an unsafe turning movement," Sgt. Nathan Parsons said. "He could have fell asleep, he could have had an undiagnosed medical condition. We're unable to prove either."

The April 10, 2014, collision occurred in Orland, about 100 miles north of Sacramento. The dead were five high school students from the Los Angeles area, three chaperones, and the drivers of the FedEx tractor-trailer and the bus. 
The bus was full of prospective Humboldt State University students heading for a campus visit, and two of the chaperones had been planning their wedding.

The California Highway Patrol released the results of its investigation at a news conference after the agency met with family members of those killed in the collision.

The agency was unable to find any mechanical defects with any vehicles involved in the crash.

The agency said driver fatigue could have played a factor, but it could not conclude either way if that or a medical condition played any role in the crash because Evans' body was so badly burned.

Evans "had sufficient time off," Parsons said. "That day, he had been working approximately eight hours at the time of the collision. But he had between eight and 10 hours of sleep the night before."

Evans was survived by a wife, who did not immediately return a Facebook message on Friday.

Carla Haywood, whose daughter Mattison died on the bus, said the investigation still didn't address their central question of why the truck driver left the road. "We're constantly wondering what happened, questioning what could have been prevented," said Haywood, 63, of Chino.

Mattison, 25, and her fiancé, 29-year-old Michael Myvett, who also died in the crash, were chaperones on the trip and had just gotten engaged in Paris. It was their second year together accompanying students on a campus trip designed to encourage the enrollment of students with disadvantaged backgrounds who would have been the first in their families to attend college.

Michael Myvett's grandmother, Debra Loyd, said the investigation's conclusion has given her closure.

"It was the driver's fault," said Loyd, 63, of Los Angeles. "I'm satisfied. For one year, we didn't know anything. Now we know something."

She called on FedEx to settle lawsuits stemming from the crash and award damages to survivors and the families of those who were killed.

"C'mon, FedEx. Get it done," she said. "Do what you gotta do. It's time."

FedEx is reviewing the report and will not comment until the National Transportation Safety Board finishes its separate investigation, company spokesman Jim McCluskey said. Victims and their families also are suing the bus company, Silverado Stages.

Gaylord Hill, whose now-19-year-old son survived the crash, said he wasn't satisfied with the investigation because without a definitive cause, nothing can be done to prevent a similar crash.

He said he thought the California Highway Patrol did all it could.