Beginning in November 2016, all new motorcoaches and some other
large buses must be equipped by manufacturers with three-point
lap-shoulder belts, the National Highway Traffic Safety
Administration said. The rule doesn't apply to school buses or city
transit buses.
An average of 21 people in large buses are killed each year in
crashes, and nearly 8,000 others are injured annually, the safety
administration said. Seat belts could reduce fatalities and
moderate-to-severe injuries by nearly half. About half of all
motorcoach fatalities are the result of rollovers, and about 70
percent of those killed in rollover accidents were ejected from the
bus.
"Adding seat belts to motorcoaches increases safety for all
passengers and drivers, especially in the event of a rollover
crash," said David Strickland, head of the safety administration.
The nation's fleet of 29,000 motorcoaches transports about 700
million passengers a year in the United States, roughly equivalent
to the domestic airline industry, according to the United Motorcoach
Association. Since buses are typically on the road for about 20 to
25 years, it will likely be many years before most motorcoaches have
seat belts.
The new rule is "an important step," the American Bus Association
said in a statement, adding that industry officials worked with
government regulators "to ensure that sufficient research and
testing went into crafting the new seat belt standard released
today." Many new buses are already equipped with seat belts, the
association said.
The National Transportation Safety Board first recommended
motorcoaches be equipped with seat belts in 1968 after investigating
a highway crash that killed 19 passengers nearly the Mojave Desert
town of Baker, Calif. Investigators said the passengers had survived
the crash, but were unable to escape a fire that consumed the
wreckage, probably because they were too badly injured and confused.
The passengers would have had a better chance of survival if they
had been held in their seats by safety belts or some other
restraint, the board said.
Hundreds of motorcoach passengers have died and even more have been
injured, many severely, since the board made its initial
recommendations. Victims have included college baseball players in
Atlanta, Vietnamese churchgoers in Texas, skiers in Utah, gamblers
returning to New York's Chinatown, and members of a high school
girls' soccer team en route to a playoff match.
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"This is a great victory for the safety of intercity bus travelers,"
said Jacqueline Gillan, president of Advocates for Highway and Auto
Safety. " At last, consumers will be afforded the basic safety
protections everyone enjoys when they get into their car
Sen. Sherrod Brown, D-Ohio, who sponsored a bill requiring seat
belts on the buses, said seat belts are "a common-sense safety
measure that is long overdue." He urged the safety administration to
move forward on two other safety measures that have been sought
nearly as long seat belts — windows that prevent passengers from
being ejected from buses in rollover crashes, and stronger roofs
that aren't crushed in such crashes.
New regulations on windows and roofs are expected to be proposed
next year, said a safety administration official, who spoke on
condition of anonymity because she was not authorized to release the
information in her own name.
Motorcoaches typically cost between $350,000 and $500,000, according
to the bus association. Seat belts would add about $3,000 to the
price of a new, 54-passenger bus, according to the safety
administration.
Requiring the addition of seat belts to existing buses was rejected
because it would have been far more expensive, about $40,000 per
bus, the agency said. The reason for the increased cost is that
seats and floors would have to be made stronger for the belts to
hold passengers in place during high-impact crashes, the agency
said.
Commercial bus operators fought seat belts for decades, but
opposition began to weaken after a high-profile accident in 2007 in
which a bus carrying Ohio's Bluffton University baseball team
plummeted off a highway overpass near Atlanta. Five players, the bus
driver and his wife were killed. Twenty-eight others were injured.
[Associated
Press; JOAN LOWY]
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