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Boulder Victims May Split Just $400,000

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Times Wire Services

Colorado lawmakers, discounting the sympathetic promises of Gov. Roy Romer, said Tuesday that bus passengers killed or injured by a seven-ton boulder that was accidentally pushed off a mountainside by a state road crew would be limited to a share of $400,000 in compensation.

Romer--who named a top-level team to investigate the Monday accident that killed seven people, including an Anaheim woman, and injured 15 others--said Tuesday that he planned to “unbureaucratize” the process for claiming damages against the state.

“I am chief executive . . . and my first response is, we caused an injury,” Romer said at a press conference. “What can we do to work out a fair way (for compensation) within the limits of the law?

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“I am sick and tired of people who try to avoid liability when it is there,” and if the state’s legal limit of $400,000 on compensation for the accident is not enough, he said he would ask the Legislature for more money.

But leaders of the Republican-controlled Colorado House and Senate met Tuesday morning with Romer, a Democrat, and initially rejected that suggestion.

“It’s far too premature to say that,” Senate President Ted Strickland said. “Of course, he can’t take back what he said in the papers. He said it out of human compassion. But we can’t make an exception to that law.”

Romer and his aides worked until midnight Monday calling families of accident victims, and they started again Tuesday morning. He also declared a state of emergency so the state could use $100,000 in contingency funds to transport relatives of the victims to Colorado.

Four investigations into the accident were under way Tuesday, counting the one by Romer’s special panel. Other agencies that have launched inquiries are the National Transportation Safety Board, the Colorado State Patrol and the Colorado Highway Department.

Six people were killed instantly and the Anaheim woman died later in a hospital when the boulder--six feet high and four feet across, and estimated by state engineers to weigh seven tons--rolled down a mountainside below 11,315-foot Berthoud Pass on Monday and ripped out the right side of a Gray Line tour bus.

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The 28 passengers and driver were taking Gray Line’s $30 “Circle Tour,” a one-day trip that starts in Denver and loops through Rocky Mountain National Park before returning to Denver. The bus was about 60 highway miles northwest of Denver when the boulder slammed into it.

Among the dead was Anne Hayes, 59, of Anaheim, who was flown from the wreck to Denver General Hospital, where she died at 7:30 p.m. Pacific time (8:30 p.m. Denver time) on Monday.

Colorado officials said Tuesday that they were having difficulty notifying Hayes’ family of her death because her only relatives “are overseas.”

The manager of the Monte Verde Apartments complex on West Crescent Avenue in Anaheim where Hayes lived said Hayes’ only relative is a sister in Florence, Italy.

The manager, Ellie Russell, described Hayes as a small, youthful, withdrawn woman who lived alone, had very few close friends and seldom spoke to her neighbors. She did not drive but filled her apartment with bus schedules and maps for her many travels.

Russell said Hayes worked as a seamstress in the Broadway department store across the street in the Anaheim Plaza shopping center.

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Also among the dead were John Killeen, 60, of Denver; Arlene Johnson, 61, of Renville, Minn.; Sol Stewart, 67, and his wife Gladys, in her 60s, of Moulton, Ala., and Keith Walters, 55, and Kathleen Walters, 60, both of Mowson, Australia.

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