
A tour bus in Ketchikan ended up in Ketchikan Creek on Wednesday after it lost power, rolled backward and went over a guardrail. There were no passengers on the Alaska Coach Tours bus, and the driver wasn’t hurt.
Deputy Police Chief Eric Mattson says the crash happened as the vehicle was heading to the Cape Fox Lodge.
“The vehicle was driving up Venetia Ave. towards Cape Fox Lodge when it lost power,” he said. “It went backwards down Venetia, crossed over Park Avenue over the sidewalk railing and crashed, rear end first, into the creek where it laid to rest.”
Mattson says the next step is getting the bus out of the creek.
“We contacted the U.S. Coast Guard Marine Safety Detachment about the vehicle in the creek,” he said. “Obviously worried about any type of fuel or other type of lubricant entering the waters.”
According to Lt. Allen Vorholt with the U.S. Coast Guard, crews did not see a visible sheen or find any evidence of oil or gas leaks. Ketchikan Creek is an anadromous fish stream, and salmon are currently heading upstream to spawn.
Vorholt says the Marine Safety Detachment will continue to monitor the area. He said that if anyone does see signs of oil in the water, they should call the National Response Center at 1-800-424-8802.
Advisories were issued to avoid Park Avenue, which is busy with pedestrians – mostly tourists – and cars and buses heading up to the Cape Fox restaurant and Ted Ferry Civic Center. Though traffic was delayed for a while, Mattson says the road is open.
“They were trying to get as many vehicles through, but still have that safety corridor for removal of the driver and just to make sure that the area was safe. So those that needed to transit quickly were given that opportunity,” he said.
A barrier was placed across the broken railing. A section of Park Avenue will be closed Thursday morning for the bus to be removed.



