The problem with rural school bus stops is that they appear almost too serene to be hazardous. A section of two-lane road, a few mailboxes, and a porch light that was still on in the early morning. On May 7, just after 7:15 a.m., Jeremiah Rutkowski, a junior in high school, went outside the Rutkowski residence in Bouckville to board the Madison Central School District bus. It was something he had done hundreds of times. Watching the security footage now gives me the impression that he had no reason to anticipate anything different on this specific Wednesday. Then, without slowing down, a pickup truck drove down Route 20.
In the video, Jeremiah can be seen approaching the bus’s open door in the same manner as any teenager approaching a school bus at seven in the morning, half asleep and carrying a backpack over one shoulder. His body language then changes. He notices something. He leaps backward. “I just figured like if that thing’s not going to stop, it’s either going to hit the bus and something’s coming flying at me or the entire truck is coming flying at me,” he later told WKTV News. It’s the type of sentence that only makes sense after the computation has already taken place in a 17-year-old’s brain in about 0.5 seconds.
The bus was pushed down the road and debris was scattered when the truck crashed into its back. The 29-year-old bus driver and twenty-three students were inside. Two kids and an adult were inside the truck. It might have been much worse. This week, Madison County residents have been saying that to one another in the little ways that neighbors discuss things, such as at the post office or the nearby gas station. It might have been much worse.
Jeremiah’s father, Matt Rutkowski, heard it while he was still inside the house. He called the sound “crunching metal,” which is frightening and clinical at the same time. He bolted outdoors. “My first priority was to make sure my son was safe and good,” he stated. “I was relieved to open that door because I wasn’t sure what would happen. I hugged him right away because of this.” It’s difficult to read that without thinking of every parent who has ever waved a child off to a school bus and then gone back inside to finish a cup of coffee, believing that someone else will handle everything after that.

The adult driver of the pickup, who was later given multiple tickets for distraction and following too closely, was also taken to a hospital with minor injuries, according to State Police’s later confirmation of the bus driver and two students. diversion. These days, that word does a lot of silent heavy lifting in crash reports. Typically, it refers to a phone. A cup of coffee occasionally. Sometimes it’s just the mind wandering for three seconds at the wrong moment. Although the report’s legal language is intentionally ambiguous, everyone who reads it understands its general meaning.
However, neither the police statement nor the citations are what really stick with you about this story. A few minutes later, Jeremiah is seen on the porch consoling one of the kids who had been inside the truck. “Once one of the kids was out of the truck and needed comforting and was sent to the porch, my brain just sort of kicked into that child caring mode,” he stated. He is a camp counselor. The fact that the morning has gone awry doesn’t seem to be enough to turn off the instinct.
This story contains a subtle lesson that would be difficult to pinpoint. There’s something about how our most dependable routines—like the school bus, the morning commute, and the wave from the porch—depend on the attention of people we’ll never meet. Matt put it more simply. “It really makes you appreciate the moment,” he replied. He’s not incorrect. He is simply expressing aloud what most people in Bouckville are likely thinking.
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