Dias Da Silva was picked up on “bus side” of the Teklanika River, according to Troopers. He’d been camping for more than a week, and apparently got to the bus while ice bridges were still intact. But when it was time for him to leave the river was “open and raging,” and he became trapped.

Because of the high volume of search and rescue operations related to the bus, Denali officials voted unanimously in March to ask the state to remove it and rejected a bid proposed by relatives of the dead to build a bridge across the Teklanika, The Anchorage Daily News reports. 

However, state officials have said they won’t remove the bus which is located near the boundary of Denali National Park and Preserve. But they did say they would be open to posting warning signs.