A 65-car pileup in Massachusetts was caused by icy roads, according to the police Sgt. Stephen Marsh. The pileup sent dozens of people to the hospital Sunday in a crash that involved 65 vehicles, including cars and tractor-trailers.
About 35 to 40 people were taken to local hospitals. Two were seriously injured. Both directions of the highway were reopened by 11:45 a.m., authorities said. Marsh compared the road to a sheet of ice.
“It was like if you went skating with your kids. It was that bad,” he told The Boston Globe.
A State Police car was rear-ended and the trooper was forced to hurriedly return to her cruiser to avoid cars sliding toward her.
The National Weather Service issued a freezing rain advisory through 11 a.m. Sunday for much of western and central Massachusetts, northeast Connecticut and northwest Rhode Island. Police advised motorists returning home from the Thanksgiving holiday to wait until state highway crews treated the roads.
Michael Verseckes, a spokesman for the state Department of Transportation, said crews treated roads Sunday morning but the road conditions deteriorated quickly.
“It came up suddenly and quickly and the number of crews we had just wasn’t enough,” he told The Telegram & Gazette.
Temperatures are forecast to rise into the 40s on Monday, keeping roads free of ice.