Boy's death leaves town in mourning

A five-year-old boy has been run over and killed by a school bus during its afternoon drop-off in...
A five-year-old boy has been run over and killed by a school bus during its afternoon drop-off in the West Coast town of Hector. Photo by Keira Stephenson.

A small West Coast town is grieving after a five-year-old boy was hit and killed by his school bus in front of his older brother.

The boy was dropped off in his hometown of Hector, 30 minutes north of Westport, about 3.10pm today and was hit by the bus as he walked home.

A number of other children, including his brother, witnessed the accident.

The boy got off the bus at the intersection of Curtis and Greenfield streets.

As the Ritchies school bus turned left into Greenfield St, it hit the boy as he crossed the road.

One witness said the boy ran out in front of the bus as it turned.

Westport police Sergeant Steve Baddock said the boy was probably killed instantly.

A resident, who wish did not wish to be identified, said the Ritchies school bus usually stopped around the corner from her house, but today was different.

"We heard yelling and screaming from the kids and thought 'gosh they're noisy today'.

"Then we realised the bus was parked outside Greenfield St, which it doesn't normally do, and then we heard the sirens,'' she said.

Family members, including children, gathered inside the police cordon with the boy, and people came and went from their houses in the small community as police waited for a forensics expert to arrive.

A neighbour who came out after the accident said about eight or nine children usually got off the bus at that stop.

They often ran along beside it waving to their friends, he said.

One ambulance, one fire engine and almost the entire Westport police staff attended the scene, said St John spokesman Ian Henderson.

A kaumatua has blessed the accident site, and a police investigation is underway.

Police have seized the bus and will interview the driver and other witnesses.

Ritchies' director Andrew Ritchie confirmed one of the company's buses was involved in the accident but refused to comment further until he had more information.

Megan Rich, principal of Granity School, where the boy attended, described it as every parent's worst nightmare.

She said the school would remain open tomorrow with a crisis response unit in attendance.

"Our biggest concern is the whanau and children and staff.''

Granity School has about 35 students across two classes. The school's most recent ERO report described it as a "caring and inclusive school culture'' within a rural area where staff know students and their families well.

Other residents who knew the victim's family said the close-knit community of about 300 was struggling to come to terms with the boy's death.

"I think the family are going through enough at the moment", said a woman who did not want to be named.

It is the third death of a young person in a vehicle-related crash on the West Coast in less than two weeks.

On August 12, Tayne Bowes, 9, drowned when his father's four-wheel-drive plunged upside-down into goldmine pond near Hokitika.

The same day, 18-year-old Nadine Lawton of Totara Flat, died in a car crash on State Highway 7 at Ngahere, 23km north-east of Greymouth.

- By Abby Gillies of APNZ and Keira Stephenson of Westport News

 

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