 Appalachian Wireless proudly brings you unlimited data. Unlimited data is only $80 a month for a single line. Four lines as low as $200. Better service? Bigger savings? That's today's Appalachian Wireless. An East Kentucky network company. Fiat is speed slow to 25 gigabytes per line to 512 kilobits for phones and tablets. And 15 gigabytes for motors. See store for more details. A frightening day today in Letcher County is two school buses crashed in separate incidents. One crash sent five people to the hospital. The other crash may have been the result of the weekend's flooding. The crashes happened Wednesday morning as students were on their way to school. Eleven students and a bus driver were on board a bus that crashed into a creek in the Kingdom Come Creek area of Letcher County. Letcher County school superintendent Tony Surgeon said the bus skidded in mud left on the roadway from this past weekend's flooding. That road was underwater from the flood that we had this weekend. And there was a lot of mud. Mud was thick and caked on that road and so he slid in the mud and slid off the edge of the road and the bus tipped over into the creek. The bus was loaded with K-8 students. No one was injured in the crash. The image on your screen was captured by an eight-year-old student who was ready to board the bus when it skidded off the road. In West Whitesburg, a small school bus collided with another vehicle head on at the intersection of Kentucky Highway 15 and U.S. 119. From what we understand, our bus was turning left onto the Bypass, the Whitesburg Bypass, and the other vehicle was coming straight on 15 and they collided. Whitesburg police said five people were sent to Whitesburg ARH Hospital with non-life-threatening injuries, including the bus driver and bus monitor on the school bus and three other people in the other vehicle. No students were on board the bus. It was a special needs bus to go to pick up children and come back, but they were empty at the time. Surgeon said the incidents illustrate the delicate situation that exists every day with transporting students to and from school. It's a huge work for us. It's one of the things that worries me the most is we've got so many children on buses out on the road. And like I said, it's not like we're driving on four-lane highways. These are really narrow roads that on Kingdom County Creek if you meet someone you have to back up. You can't pass. It's a single-lane road, so it is a big concern. And like I said, we're just really happy that everything worked out the way no one was injured. Both of Wednesday's crashes remain under investigation. In Letcher County, Chris Anderson, EKB News.