Northwestern Local Schools canceled all classes for Wednesday following a rollover school bus crash that killed one elementary student and injured 23 other children.
Grief counselors will be at the schools on Wednesday, according to the district's Facebook page.
"The elementary and the (Junior/Senior) High will open at 8 a.m. for students, staff, and community members who need assistance and want to talk to a mental health specialist," the Facebook post says. "Our hearts and prayers go out to the families that have been impacted by this tragedy."
Here's what we know about the crash right now:
- The driver of a 2010 Honda Odyssey minivan crossed left of center shortly after 8 a.m. Tuesday on state Route 41 about a mile and a half from the Northwestern schools campus, according to the Ohio State Highway Patrol. The bus driver saw the minivan and attempted to swerve out of the way, but the Odyssey struck the rear of the bus. That caused the bus to rollover.
- One elementary student was ejected and died at the scene. The child hasn't been identified.
- 23 other students were transported to local hospitals, one of them with serious, life-threatening injuries.
- The minivan driver, Hermanio Joseph, 35, and his passenger, Robert Mompremier, 37, were treated for non-life-threatening injuries at Springfield Regional Medical Center.
- The Greater Dayton Area Hospital Association declared a mass casualty incident.
- A parent reunification center was set up at the German Twp. Firehouse in the immediate aftermath of the crash.
- Support from neighboring districts and local and national leaders has poured in for the Northwestern community.
David Lewis lives on the corner of Lawrenceville Drive and Troy Road. The bus crash site is visible from his house. The school bus overturned on his property. The Honda Odyssey spun to a stop on another section of his property across the road. Lewis was home when the crash happened and saw the aftermath.
Lewis has a pre-school age daughter himself.
"It's sad because you never you know — you see your kids, on Facebook and Instagram and the parents post pictures of them holding up the (first day of school) signs," Lewis said. "And just you never think that soon as you send them off and then 3 minutes later, you get a phone call ... It's just sadness."
Ohio Gov. Mike DeWine called the crash heartbreaking and offered condolences to the family of the student killed.
"Our hearts also go out to everyone on the bus, as well as their families, peers, and teachers. Our prayers are with you all," DeWine said in a statement on Tuesday.
U.S. Secretary of Education Miguel Cardona spoke in Cincinnati on Tuesday morning, saying he was praying for the families and the community.
"We recognize that whether or not your children were on that bus, that affects the entire community ... We are thinking about the families. It's a very difficult way to start. Our thoughts and prayers are with them, and if there's anything we can do to support them, we're going to be there."