Tuesday Night Ice on Highway Crash Thread

 

As the roads froze in 28-degree outside air temperature and light drizzle, crashes all over town due to ice began. Loop 306 is littered with the carnage of cars and pickups in wrecks, secondary wrecks and new wrecks happening before the previous wrecks are cleared up.

Some cars that would otherwise been towed have first responders asking crash victims to try to clear the roadway of their vehicles on their own power, if able.

Here is a rundown of crashes:

  • 10:34 p.m. - Crash with injuries on the the Avenue L bridge across Concho River. Driver was thrown into windshield. Glass shards reported to be in his head.
  • 10:34 p.m. - City of San Angelo closed Mathis Field (KSJT) until further notice. Citywide trash pickup is cancelled Wednesday.
  • 10:00 p.m. - After Taco Bell on Knickerbocker Rd. closed, Twin Peaks held on for as long as it could and is finally calling it a night and closing.
  • 9:54 p.m. - Despite warnings not to drive, Houston Harte is backed up for miles near the N. Bryant overpass.
  • 9:54 p.m. - Rollover at F.M. 2288 at Arden Rd.with no injuries.
  • 9:44 p.m. - Crash on FM 2288 near Grape Creek.
  • 9:44 p.m. - N. Bryant has a sheet of ice on it.
  • 9:42 p.m. - A Japanese car is on fire behind the Community Hospital. Reports are that it is a Honda.
  • 9:42 p.m. - Both crashes on US. 87 N have no injuries.
  • 9:20 p.m. - Major crash on U.S. 87 North at Graston Rd. No units on scene yet, as it's quite a ways there on the county line. Medic 11 EMS is enroute.
  • 9:20 p.m. - Another major crash on U.S. 87 north in Water Valley.. Rollover, entrapment.
  • 9:20 p.m. Rollover with trapped driver at 3600 N. Bryant.
  • 9:21 p.m. - San Angelo police advised everyone to stay home, off the roads. And if travel by motor vehicle is absolutely necessary, do not attempt to drive on Loop 306/Houston Harte.
  • 9:00 p.m. - So many people are wanting to go to the hospital with minor injuries that they are packing the ambulances and using police squad cars, according to the radio. The crash on Loop 306 near McDonald's where the pictures above were taken is being reported as a 10-car pile-up. We cannot confirm, or get there.
  • 8:20 p.m. - 8:30 p.m. - Two additional crashes on Loop 306/Houston Harte, in addition to the rollover in front of Jim Bass Ford with the driver trapped.
  • 8:30 p.m. - Pickup truck rollover crash on Houston Harte in front of Jim Bass Ford
  • 8:01 p.m. - 8:20 p.m. - 8 crashes on Loop 306 or Houston Harte - No injuries
  • 8:00 p.m. 3900 Houston Harte – No injuries
  • 7:59 p.m. 400 Houston Harte – No injuries.
  • Prior to 7:59 p.m. : 11 crashes on Loop 306 or Houston Harte Expressway

Advisories

  • The onramp next to Olive Garden on Loop 306 is closed.
  • The onramp near Chili’s is closed.
  • Texas DPS issued an advisory at 8:51 p.m.: Texas Department of Transportation (TxDOT) crews in the San Angelo District are treating bridges and roadways this evening and will continue working through the night. Counties reporting the most sleet and ice include Glasscock, Sterling, Runnels and Tom Green. Travel in these areas is highly discouraged until conditions improve. Multiple crashes have been reported in these counties as conditions continue to deteriorate. The San Angelo District includes the following counties: Glasscock, Sterling, Coke, Runnels, Reagan, Irion, Tom Green, Concho, Menard, Schleicher, Crockett, Sutton, Kimble, Edwards and Real. Drivers are strongly encouraged to check road conditions before deciding to travel tonight or tomorrow morning and travel is strongly discouraged. Road conditions can be found by accessing:
    •   TxDOT’s toll-free highway condition line at (800)-452-9292
    •   TxDOT’s facebook page (Facebook.com/TxDOT)
    •   and/or TxDOT’s Twitter account (Twitter.com/TxDOT) or @TxDOTSanAngelo
  • Advisory on Dec. 31, 2014 at 7:30 a.m.:The Texas Department of Transportation (TxDOT) crews in the San Angelo District have worked overnight and will continue to work 12-hour shifts until the ice event is over. The DriveTexas.org website is currently showing 194 conditions, mostly ice, throughout most of the district. The only county currently not reporting icy conditions is Real County (Leakey area) in the southernmost part of the district. Travel is highly discouraged until conditions improve. Multiple crashes have been reported in these counties and the IH 10 corridor is particularly hazardous. The San Angelo District includes the following counties: Glasscock, Sterling, Coke, Runnels, Reagan, Irion, Tom Green, Concho, Menard, Schleicher, Crockett, Sutton, Kimble, Edwards and Real. Drivers are strongly encouraged to check road conditions before deciding to travel today and travel is strongly discouraged. Road conditions can be found by accessing:
    • http://www.drivetexas.org
    • TxDOT’s toll-free highway condition line at (800)-452-9292
    • TxDOT’s facebook page (Facebook.com/TxDOT)
    • and/or TxDOT’s Twitter account (Twitter.com/TxDOT) or @TxDOTSanAngelo

 

 

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Comments

john a, Tue, 12/30/2014 - 21:55
there are better roads than the loop and Houston Harte in this weather!
people havent figured out how to drive on our screwed up roads yet? theres officially no hope for the stupid and ignorant.
Zoomie, Wed, 12/31/2014 - 01:31
It might be interesting to plot the wrecks on a map and do the same the next time we have weather.
You fool! We must cull the feeble of mind and body who drive without forethought or coordination! Bah ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha!
I'm thinking if you hit the windshield and it leaves glass shards in your head you weren't wearing a seat belt even in this weather. The glass shards may hurt but probably no damage done to the head.
ocs61, Wed, 12/31/2014 - 10:58
Many of the accidents seem preventable, however, the ice simply accentuates the already awful driving habits of many people in the San Angelo area. I am on the road most days in town. On a good day with no ice, I see people regularly run red lights, stop signs, pass on the shoulder, or pass in the left turn lane on Sherwood Way, or cut over 3 lanes on the Houston Harte to get to their exit because they couldn't be behind those "slow" cars, people who pull out in front of vehicles (when there are no other vehicles behind it!), and panic on the roads, as if, "If I don't pull out NOW I will be struck by a meteor!". "If I have to stop at this light the world will END!" Watch people trying to turn left across Sherwood Way between Southwest and Southland in the late afternoon. Taking risks, and my question is always: Why? San Angelo is one of the most stressful places to drive simply because so many people neglect common courtesy. Yes, it's much better than, say, rush hour traffic on I-20 going into Odessa, or being stuck on the highway in Houston, or grid lock in LA. But even at our worst here, we don't rival Portland, Or. Go to youtube and search for driving in Portland if you don't believe me. What makes it so stressful here is that people have become some of the most rude and reckless drivers I have ever come across. It doesn't have to be that way, and no, you will not perish if you actually have to stop at a stop light and wait a cycle, or wait until the road is clear before you pull out.
This seems to happen every year. Is that not justification for some sort of improved road deicing program? Why not use a little of the money from all the tax increases?
bebop, Sat, 01/03/2015 - 13:28
once a year, the ice? stay home. And for the young lady saying somewhere else "stop driving 60 and go, like, 30mph instead" ??? lol, there's your problem, right there. "going 30 mph" isn't slow. good grief. a nation of idiots, in one town.
I absolutely I agree with you. I mean it's not like NO job can't just be shut down for 3-5 days at a time at least once a year. We don't need safer winter roads so that nurses, doctors, police, emergency services, or utility company employees can get to work safely. After all, having to venture out into bad weather in order to save lives or provide for a family is a matter of personal choice, and we're all idiots for making that choice. I don't know about the rest of you but I, for one, am much more comfortable knowing that the solution to winter weather accidents lies solely in the IQ of the driver, and not at all in the conditions of roadways or the regionally-related lack of winter weather driving experience. Let's just let natural selection take its course and do nothing to prevent it.

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