Early Tuesday morning, a devastating rollover crash on Spur Tree Hill main road, a notoriously dangerous stretch of highway west of Mandeville, Jamaica, has left two people dead, shining a renewed spotlight on longstanding safety concerns that have plagued the steep route for decades.
Local law enforcement has released the identities of the two victims: 25-year-old Jordan Sterling, a truck driver from Kingston 20’s Patrick Drive, who was operating the cement-loaded tractor trailer at the time of the incident, and 21-year-old Yanice McLeggon, a welder residing in St Catherine’s Central Village, who was riding as a passenger in the vehicle.
According to initial police accounts, Sterling lost control of the heavily loaded vehicle as it traversed the hill, causing the truck to overturn multiple times. Both occupants were thrown from the cab during the sequence of crashes, and the trailer ultimately came to a rest just meters from residential homes in the Eglinton community. The force of the impact was powerful enough to jolt nearby residents awake at approximately 5:00 a.m.
One local resident, who spoke to reporters on condition of anonymity, described the chaos and terror of the immediate aftermath. “I was sleeping and I heard a hard hit and something like a scrape and like it slammed into something. Then I saw the light dimming and then I got up and heard everybody saying ‘Truck turn over!’ When I came outside it was just dust; like when you see fog. Everything down there was fogged up, I couldn’t see anything [clearly],” he recalled. When he reached the crash site, he encountered a horrific scene: Sterling was still partially conscious, moaning in pain with only his hand moving, but residents lacked the equipment and training to safely move him, while McLeggon lay motionless on the hillside.
Emergency response teams from the Mandeville Fire Station received the emergency alert just minutes after the crash, according to District Officer Trevor Robinson. “On arrival [we] saw a trailer overturned over the precipice. After carrying out a search of the area, one person was found alive and another person found with no sign of movement,” Robinson said. He praised his team for their swift and skilled work to extract the two victims from the wreckage. “Our men really need to be commended. We arrived at a good time… When the situation was assessed we realised that we needed a team of persons to carry out the rescue, so [they] were deployed and they were excellent in what they did,” he added.
The Spur Tree Hill main road serves as a critical transportation link connecting Mandeville and its surrounding areas to St Elizabeth and other western destinations in Jamaica. For years, road safety advocates and local drivers have warned that the route’s steep gradient and sharp curves make it exceptionally dangerous for heavy goods vehicles, which often travel slowly up and down the hill, creating persistent traffic hazards and a long track record of fatal crashes.
Back in February 2022, Dr Lucien Jones, vice-chairman of Jamaica’s Road Safety Council, alongside senior law enforcement officials, outlined the core causes of repeated crashes on the hill in an interview with the *Jamaica Observer*. At the time, Jones noted that many drivers operating heavy vehicles on Spur Tree Hill lack proper training for navigating its challenging terrain. A key recurring mistake, he explained, is that drivers fail to shift into a low gear early enough to control their speed when descending, relying instead on brake pads that can overheat and fail when carrying heavy loads, especially around sharp curves. “Training is a central part of it, in terms of getting your general licence or your trailer licence,” Jones said. “[They] depend rather on brakes which can fail you, especially with very heavy vehicles and turning around those curves often leads to the kind of news reports that we get about crashes, both non-fatal and fatal,” he added. Jones also urged all drivers, both ascending and descending the hill, to exercise extreme caution, as unexpected hazards can appear around any blind curve.
On Tuesday, Adave Dockery, a fellow truck driver who spoke to reporters at the crash site, echoed Jones’ warnings, emphasizing the steep descent of Spur Tree Hill demands strict adherence to safety rules. “This hill is very famous and what people need to do, especially truck drivers, is just obey the sign that is at the top of the road. I am a truck driver, but not the big unit. I drive a seven-tonne unit and it always tell us to use the lower gear. Because the thing about it, if the bigger unit starts to pick up speed it is very hard to engage the lower gear and the truck will get away from you and this hill has no mercy and it will take your life,” Dockery said. He stressed that careless driving endangers not only the driver but everyone else on the road, noting that all workers deserve to return home safely to their families at the end of the day. “You just have to exercise caution and obey the rules of the road code. Obey the speed limit, use your low gear and come down the hill. [If not it] can take your life and also endanger the lives of others. People want to see their relatives return home after a long day of work and if you don’t do what you have to do, your family is going to miss you and you are also going to allow people to miss their family members. So just exercise caution,” he said.
Beyond calling for better driver compliance, Dockery has joined a growing chorus of local residents and transportation workers calling on the Jamaican government to speed up long-planned construction of the Spur Tree Hill Bypass, a project that would divert heavy through traffic away from the dangerous hill route. “It is very urgent, because this hill has no mercy, especially when it is wet or damp… The hill naturally is a threat for bigger units, so we just have to exercise caution as much as possible,” he said.
Multiple photos from the scene, taken by photojournalist Kasey Williams, show the mangled wreckage of the tractor trailer resting off the side of the road, spilled cement covering the nearby hillside, and a broken utility pole damaged in the crash.
