Student survivor of deadly Bamfield, B.C., bus crash recalls screams

One of the 47 people aboard the bus that crashed into a ravine Friday night on its way to Bamfield said the vehicle filled with screams as it began to tip.

The bus had been travelling along a gravel road when it ended up in a ravine on its side, killing two people on board and injuring others.

AJ Wasserman, one of the 45 UVic students aboard the bus for a field trip to the marine science centre, spoke to journalists Sunday over social media.

The undergraduate student was in the back of the bus when it happened.

'Saw headlights'

"I saw headlights and felt us swerve to avoid them," Wasserman wrote. "Thought we were just going to move back but then instead we just started tipping and everything just started happening in slow motion."

Wasserman felt the bus sliding and then heard screams.

"The scariest scream I have ever heard."

Wasserman was on the side of the bus that ended up on the ground and said most people tumbled to that side as the bus came to a stop.

Dean Stoltz/CHEK News
Dean Stoltz/CHEK News

Wasserman estimated that two people were wearing seatbelts and recalls seeing them hanging in the air as the bus lay on its side.

Chief Councillor Robert Dennis, with the Huu-ay-aht First Nations, came across the crash site about 30 minutes after it happened.

Dennis said the bus was on its side and nearly 10 metres down an embankment when he arrived. He said students were pulling themselves up to the road with a rope.

When firefighters arrived they continued to help get passengers out of the bus.

Chris Corday/CBC
Chris Corday/CBC

The gravel road from Port Alberni to Bamfield can be perilous, but Wasserman said the bus didn't seem to be travelling much faster than 40 kilometres per hour.

Wasserman also said that the bus left Victoria late due to traffic. The cause of the crash is under investigation by Transport Canada and the RCMP.

The University of Victoria opened counselling services for students seeking help on Sunday.