Page 5 - Work Force January 2021
P. 5

Washingtonville bus driver, former unit president dies following school bus crash
 WASHINGTONVILLE — CSEA
is mourning the loss of former Washingtonville School District Unit President Andy Sanchez, who died recently after sustaining injuries
in a horrific school bus crash the morning of Oct. 21. He was 74.
Sanchez, a nine-year CSEA member, was driving students to the district’s Little Britain Elementary School when
a landscaping
truck traveling
in the opposite
direction crossed over the double yellow line on state Route 207, hitting Sanchez’s bus head on.
Emergency personnel extricated both Sanchez and a young student seated behind him from the bus.
The other seven students on the
bus avoided serious injury. The injured student, a 6-year-old girl, was
hospitalized for two days following the crash. Police and CSEA’s Occupational Safety and Health Department are investigating the incident.
Sanchez’s death has left the tight-knit Washingtonville community heartbroken as they remember the beloved school bus driver known to students as “Mr. Andy.”
“Our hearts go out to Andy’s family, friends and fellow CSEA members,” said Southern Region President Anthony Adamo.
Valued by students and staff
Washingtonville School District Unit President Dan Lively said Sanchez had a way of connecting with students that made both students and parents happy to have their children on Sanchez’s bus route.
“He was the kind of driver who really connected with the kids,” said Lively. “During the holidays, he would sing songs with the kids on
Sanchez (Source: Facebook)
the bus and keep things fun. He just
really enjoyed being on the bus with them and always put their safety first.”
Sanchez’s time as CSEA unit president was actually a continuation of earlier union activism, Lively
said, noting that Sanchez was a representative while working at the Indian Point nuclear power plant in Westchester County.
Both in the Washingtonville community and as a CSEA officer, Lively said Sanchez
was always there to
help.
“If you had an
issue and he knew about it; if he could help you, he would,” said Lively.
Orange County
Local President
Glen Arnold
described Sanchez
as “a genuinely warm and wonderful individual, one we will miss greatly.”
“As a driver, he was most concerned about the students in his care,” Arnold said. “As a unit president, he worked with passion, integrity and energy.”
An unquestionable fighter
In a blog post following Sanchez’s death, his daughters stated that their father “left this world as he lived it,
an unquestionable fighter.”
His daughters said their father, an
avid fisherman and a noted singer, was a genuine man with “no phony bone to be found within 100 miles of him.”
Initial media reports following the crash stated that Sanchez tried to calm students while waiting for emergency personnel by singing to them. Selflessness is part of who Sanchez was, his daughters wrote in the blog post.
“He deserved a good life, he fought for it with grit and brutal truth and self-reflection,” his daughters wrote. “More than that
he deserved an impeccable final chapter. That it was robbed of him goes beyond anything
comprehensible and questions the notion of what is fair and just...but there’s one more thing you can do to make the ending more idyllic: keep his spirit alive, speak his name often and with clarity and dignity and joy; practice patience and kindness; fight as doggedly for your neighbor as you would yourself.”
“Raise high the roof beams. A good man is on his way.”
— Jessica Ladlee
   (Source: Facebook)
January 2021
The Work Force 5
“As a driver, he was most concerned about the students
in his care. As a
unit president, he worked with passion, integrity and energy.”
  















































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