Mom grateful for good Samaritans on Sinpatch Road

WASSAIC — Even as COVID-19 cases and frigid winter temperatures have kept residents in isolation, it’s a comfort to know there are guardian angels and good Samaritans out there watching over folks in their time of need. Such was the case recently for Hayleigh Sachs, 17, who was driving home to Pleasant Valley on Sunday evening, Jan. 23, after an ice skating date in Connecticut with her boyfriend, Noah.

As Hayleigh’s very worried mother, Stephanie, explained, her daughter — one of four children — was traveling along Sinpatch Road in Wassaic around 9 p.m. when she lost control of the car. The roads were slippery that nights as it was snowing outside.

Sachs said Hayleigh’s Red Honda Prelude was heading toward a large tree when her daughter turned the wheel, sliding toward another tree but thankfully avoiding the larger tree. The teenager, did, however, wind up in a ditch off the side of the road.

Another piece of luck, said the grateful mom, was when multiple travelers stopped to help Hayleigh and make sure she was OK.

Sachs was alerted about her daughter’s accident though the Life360 app, through which Hayleigh said she was OK and sent her location to her mother. Pulling up the map on the Life360 app, Sachs said she could see the accident occurred  off the main road in a wooded area.

“My heart was in my throat and I was in panic,” Sachs said, recalling the moment she learned her daughter was in trouble. “I went into pure hysterics thinking everything imaginable.”

Getting her other children into the car and heading to the scene of the accident, Sachs said she could still communicate with Hayleigh despite spotty cell service. She advised her who to call and what to do.

As Sachs drove to Wassaic, Hayleigh said multiple drivers stopped to see if she was OK, if she needed assistance and if there was someone on the way to help. While they didn’t have any tow rope on them, Sachs said those who stopped offered to call for help.

Though she didn’t catch her name, Sachs recalled one woman in particular who stopped to help her daughter. Described as being in her 30s and driving toward Connecticut in an SUV with a Connecticut license plate, the woman had two dogs in the car with her.

Fortunately for Hayleigh, she also had tow rope, and together they put the rope on Hayleigh’s car and pulled it back onto the roadside.

Neither Hayleigh nor her car sustained any damages as a result of the accident. After arriving on the scene, Sachs checked on everyone and then followed her daughter back to Pleasant Valley.

Sachs expressed her gratitude to those who stopped to help Hayleigh in a heartfelt post on the “Wassaic & Amenia Community Page” on Facebook on Monday, Jan. 24.

“The circumstances could have been worse if she didn’t miss those trees and I thank God sent an Angel who was driving down the same road.”

Later, she further expressed her absolute relief and thanks to those in Wassaic.

“Words alone cannot express my gratitude. Hayleigh is my eldest child and it’s a mother’s worst fear when a teenager starts driving, especially in the winter months. It’s a relief as a parent to know there are local residents who are still looking out for each other as well as those passing through town.”

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