Three injured people had to be cut free after a four-vehicle collision at an accident black-spot outside Leeds where three students were killed five years ago.
A fleet of six ambulances and fire crews from West and North Yorkshire were mobilised to deal with the latest crash which happened at 8.30pm on Tuesday (February 14) on the A58 Leeds Road near Wetherby. A van and three cars were involved in the collision about 750 metres from Wetherby police station roundabout, towards Collingham.
Four people suffered spinal, whiplash and other injuries and were taken to hospitals in Harrogate and York.
One suffered a broken leg. Fire crews from Wetherby, Stanks in Leeds, Harrogate and Tadcaster were involved in the rescue.
A Toyota Aygo saloon was a complete write-off.
A Ford Fiesta, Vauxhall Combi van and a Kia saloon all had frontal damage.
Three people were trapped.
Wetherby Watch Commander Jack Farnell led the operation to free them.
“There were two people in the van and one in the Toyota,” he said. “The doors had to come off the van. We had to cut the roof off the Toyota.
“The others were walking wounded. The professionalism of the fire crews and ambulance paramedics working together made this a speedy extraction,” he said.
“There was excellent liaison between the two fire services from North and West Yorkshire, and the paramedics.”
Response
Three fast response ambulance vehicles and three ambulances were involved.
Watch Commander Farnell said: “But drivers should be warned to slow down – this is an accident blackspot,” he said.
In December 2006, three Wetherby student friends, Oliver Cross, Michael Tempest and Thomas Dunn, all 16, died when their Ford Escort was involved in a collision.
Their friend, 17-year-old James Trotman, who was driving, suffered serious injuries but survived.
source: yorkshireeveningpost.co.uk
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