Oregon bus crash survivors to resume Vancouver trip - Action News
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Oregon bus crash survivors to resume Vancouver trip

Some of the survivors of Sunday's fatal bus crash in northeastern Oregon are expected to resume their journey to Vancouver today.

Oregon car dealer offers to drive survivors to Vancouver in SUVs

Bus crash survivors returning to B.C.

12 years ago
Duration 1:44
A group of survivors of a crash in Oregon are making their way back to Metro Vancouver

Some of the survivors of Sunday's fatal bus crash in northeastern Oregon are expected to resume their journey to Vancouver today.

The Red Cross saysa number of the survivorsare afraid to get aboard another bus.

So a Ford dealer in La Grande, Ore., is offering to drive them to Vancouver in passenger vehicles, including four-wheel-drive sport utility vehicles.

Nine people were killed and 38 were injured on Sundaywhena tour bus enroute to Vancouver, B.C., flipped over a guardrail and plummeted more than 60 metres down an embankment west of an area called Deadman Pass on a stretch of Interstate 84 in Oregon.

Names of victims released

Of the nine people killed in the crash, five havebeen named by the Oregon State Medical Examiner's Office and the Oregon State Police.

On Tuesday, police identified 57-year-old Dale Osborn of Spanaway, Wash., as one of the nine victims.

On Wednesday, police released the names of four more victimskilled in Sunday's crash.

Oun Hong Jung, 87, and his wife, Joong Wha Kim, 63, were named as two of the victims. Jung andKim werefrom Korea and reportedly staying with relatives in Bothell, Wash.

A 75-year-old woman, Yongho Lee, was also named. Lee was from Lynnwood, Wash.

Girl staying in B.C.killed in crash

Police also released the name of a young B.C.-based victim.

Youmin Kim, 11, was from South Korea. Police said she had been staying with a family in B.C.

Police said the otherfour fatalities three men andone woman are all of Asian descent.

Of the more than three dozen people injured, 14 remain in hospital.

The tour bus, owned byMi Joo Tour and Travel in Vancouver, was on the final leg of a nine-day tour of the western United States.

With files from The Canadian Press and The Associated Press