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NATIONAL COALITION OF SCHOOL BUS SAFETY NEWS 2007
Proposal Would Require School Bus
Seat Belts
January 30, 2007
JEFFERSON CITY — A Tuesday morning school bus crash involving 26
students in the St. Louis area prompted two representatives to renew
their call for requiring new school buses to have seat belts.
According to the Missouri State Highway Patrol, the bus struck a car
and rolled over around 8 a.m. on Missouri Route 30 in Jefferson
County. None of the students were seriously injured. The bus driver
and car driver were hospitalized.
Rep. Sam Page, D-St. Louis County, and Rep. Timothy Flook,
R-Liberty, have proposed a bill to add a $15 surcharge to moving
traffic violations to help school districts fund seat belts on new
school buses. The project could cost between $6,000 and $7,000 per
bus, Flook said.
Under the bill, schools could begin to phase in the new lap-shoulder
seat belt-equipped buses beginning Jan. 1, 2008.
In fall 2005, Gov. Matt Blunt called on legislators to require seat
belts on new buses. But the idea met with stiff resistance from
opponents who argued it would impose a financial burden on schools
without significantly improving safety.
Flook said he began to champion school bus safety in May 2005, when
a Liberty Public School District bus careened through an
intersection and rolled over, injuring several students — two
permanently. The crash killed the drivers of two vehicles.
“Once you roll over, the child is no longer like a child sitting in
a seat,” Flook said. “The child is essentially like a tennis ball
inside of a dryer rolling around.”
After the wreck, Flook served on the state’s School Bus Safety Task
Force. He later discovered that the National Highway Traffic Safety
Administration doesn’t test bus safety in rollover crashes or the
safety of seating three students per seat.
“Right then, we found out there was two gaping holes to their
testing,” Flook said.
According to the American Academy of Pediatrics, there was an annual
average of 17,000 school bus-related injuries between 2001 and 2003.
Alan Ross, president of the National Coalition for School Bus
Safety, said school bus wrecks are a “fairly common problem.” Ross
said six school bus-related wrecks in one day — including the one in
Jefferson County — had been reported across the nation by Thursday
afternoon.
“It’s a very dangerous vehicle,” Ross said. “It’s hard to steer.
This vehicle is an antique.”
Brent Ghan, spokesman for the Missouri School Boards’ Association,
said the association historically has not favored mandatory seat
belts on school buses. Not only has research been mixed about
whether seat belts increase a student’s safety, but Ghan also said
it is unclear if the proposed funding mechanism could fully pay for
the new belts.
But Rep. Sally Faith, R-St. Charles, said she’s optimistic Missouri
could soon join the list of states requiring buses to have seat
belts.
“I think the way to eat an elephant is one bite at a time,” Faith
said. “It’s just now getting its momentum. It takes a while to get
everything passed.”
By GAVIN OFF
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