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NHTSA 19-07
Contact: Brian Turmail, Tel.: (202) 366-4570
Monday, November 19, 2007
Secretary Peters Catches Bus to School, Proposes New Safety Rules for School
Buses
Click to view - School Bus Notice
Of Proposed Rulemaking
RALEIGH, N.C.--U.S. Transportation Secretary Mary E. Peters today buckled up and
rode with children in a school bus to Morrisville Elementary School near
Raleigh, where she announced a new federal proposal to make school buses safer
by requiring higher seat backs and setting new seat belt standards for the
nation’s 474,000 school buses.
“Our proposed rule would make children safer, put parents at ease and give
communities a clearer picture of how to protect students,” Secretary Peters
said. “It’s never too late to learn, especially when it comes to protecting our
children.”
Beginning one year after the rule goes into effect, all new school buses would
be equipped with 24-inch seat backs. This increase, up from the current 20
inches, will better protect child passengers by helping keep older kids and
adults from being thrown over seats in a crash, hurting themselves and others,
Secretary Peters said.
“Even the smallest changes can make a big difference,” said Administrator
Nicole Nason of the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA).
“The higher seat backs will help provide children with even greater protection
in the event of a crash.”
The proposal also requires all new small buses, which are more prone to
roll-over than full-size buses, to be equipped with three-point belts within
three years of the new rule taking effect, replacing the current lap-belts-only
requirement, Secretary Peters said.
For large buses, the proposed rule for the first time would provide federal
standards for seat belts for school districts that make the decision to add
them. The Secretary said the federal government would allow school districts to
use federal highway safety funds to cover the additional cost of equipping buses
with seat belts to encourage greater use.
Secretary Peters rode on a bus with three-point seat belts to the Wake County
school, which is one of the first in the country to equip some of its new buses
with seat belts. She also spoke with students in a second grade classroom about
how to be safe while riding the bus to school.
The proposed new rule is based, in part, on information gathered during a public
meeting on school bus safety that NHTSA held in July. At that meeting, Secretary
Peters challenged state and local government policymakers, school bus
manufacturers, pupil transportation associations and consumer groups to help
develop new ways to make school buses even safer.
Secretary Peters noted school buses already are the safest form of motor vehicle
transportation, with a fatality rate that is nearly six times lower than
passenger vehicles. On average, fewer than eight passengers die in school bus
crashes every years, even though 474,000 school buses carry 25.1 million
children more than 4.8 billion miles annually.
Public comments on the proposed new regulations will be accepted for 60 days. To
view the proposal, go to: www.nhtsa.dot.gov.
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