America celebrates another I-35W hero

Authored by startribune.com and submitted by MNGrrl
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WASHINGTON - He says he was just doing his job, but a 22-year-old Minneapolis youth worker will be honored today with one of the nation's highest civilian awards for his actions on Aug. 1, 2007 -- the day the Interstate 35W bridge collapsed. At a ceremony in the shadow of the Tomb of the Unknowns in Arlington, Va., Jeremy Hernandez will be recognized for saving the lives of more than 50 school children in a bus that went down in the wreckage of the bridge. Hernandez, saving money to study auto mechanics, still works among some of the same kids and their families at Waite House in south Minneapolis, where the ill-fated bus was headed during the crash. "Anybody else would have done the same thing," he said by phone from the Waite House gym, where a boisterous group of kids was playing and raising a ruckus. "You can't turn your back on the kids." Hernandez and two other citizen-heroes, from Missouri and New Jersey, were chosen for the 2009 Above & Beyond Citizen Honors, awarded by the Congressional Medal of Honor Foundation. One of last year's winners was Matthew Miller, a Twin Cities construction worker who helped pull a half-dozen dazed motorists from the tangled beams and concrete of the 35W bridge. The foundation, which represents the fewer than 100 living recipients of the Medal of Honor, a military award, seeks to recognize ordinary civilians from around the nation who show extraordinary courage or selflessness. Organizers of today's event said there was a strong possibility President Obama would attend. This view of the collapsed 35W bridge looking west from University Avenue shows the school bus from which youth worker Jeremy Hernandez, 22, helped save more than 50 children. Returning from field trip Hernandez and Miller were among the many Minnesotans who responded heroically when the bridge collapsed, killing 13 people and injuring more than 100.

Like Miller, Hernandez said he was simply doing his job when the disaster struck. He was on a school bus with 52 children returning from a swimming field trip at the Bunker Beach Water Park in Coon Rapids. Unlike Miller, Hernandez was on top of the bridge -- in the bus -- when it went down. In an instant, he became one of the victims. "It still feels like a dream," Hernandez said. The surreal experience of riding a large slab of the bridge upright into the Mississippi River gorge ended in a disbelieving moment of dark silence. The bus, a few feet from the water and a burning semitrailer truck, was enveloped in a massive cloud of dust. "At first it was quiet, and then there was some moaning and cries," Hernandez recalls. But he couldn't see the kids. As his mind and his vision cleared -- and the fear arose that the bus might still slip into the water -- Hernandez jumped over the seats and kicked open the back emergency door. One by one, he handed the children to other survivors on the slab of angled road surface where the bus had come to a rest. Hernandez was the last one off. "He wouldn't have left anyone on that bus," said Julie Graves, a youth program manager at Waite House who was injured and lifted out of the bus by Hernandez. Among those who also came to the children's rescue was Gary Babineau, whose pick-up truck had fallen nearby. Aerial photos of the yellow school bus, perched precariously on the crumpled surface of the bridge, would serve as a vivid illustration of how much worse the 35W tragedy might have been. Of the 61 people on the bus -- 50 mostly elementary-age students, eight staff members, the driver and her two children -- 14 were taken to local hospitals, including Graves and the driver, Kimberly Dahl, who crunched two vertebrae in her lower back. Hernandez suffered cuts and a lower back injury. 'A lot of heroes that day' Officials at the Pillsbury United Communities, which runs Waite House and other community centers, have praised the work of all staff members on the bus. The First Student bus company gave plaques and $5,000 checks to Hernandez, Dahl, Babineau, and Graves, who suffered broken vertebrae in the crash.

unscrewthestars on July 24th, 2017 at 01:53 UTC »

I moved to Minnesota last summer. My fiance is a Minnesota native. He had told me about this bridge collapse like five or six times and every time I told him I had zero recollection of it happening, but it was etched into his mind.

Extra fact (that OP probably knows): The back door of the school bus is on display in the Minnesota History Center in St. Paul. It was signed by the students.

egotisticalnoob on July 24th, 2017 at 00:18 UTC »

I remember when that bridge collapsed. I didn't, however, hear about this story.

MNGrrl on July 23rd, 2017 at 23:04 UTC »

"Another apparent hero was Taystee truck driver Paul Eickstadt, who died in a fiery crash beside the bus. According to Grave and others on the bus, Eickstadt appeared to veer to give the bus room as the bridge went down."

A memorial for the victims includes a pillar for him. A staff member near the rear of the bus was awarded one of the highest civilian medals the nation bestows, considered a rough equivalent to the military's Medal of Honor. Having suffered a back injury and as the truck mentioned above burned and slid into the river, he climbed to the rear door and opened it. With the help of other staff members, the children were handed to rescuers who had slid down collapsed deck segment to help.