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Federal Funds to Pay for Seat Belts in School Buses

WASHINGTON, D.C. --- New federal rules will make the nation’s 474,000 school buses safer by requiring higher seat backs, mandating lap and shoulder belts on small school buses, and setting safety standards for seat belts on large school buses, U.S. Secretary of Transportation Mary E. Peters announced.

by Staff
October 15, 2008
2 min to read


WASHINGTON, D.C. --- New federal rules will make the nation’s 474,000 school buses safer by requiring higher seat backs, mandating lap and shoulder belts on small school buses, and setting safety standards for seat belts on large school buses, U.S. Secretary of Transportation Mary E. Peters announced.  

"Even though riding in school buses is the safest form of travel in America today, any accident is still a tragedy," Peters said.  "Taken together, these steps are designed with a single purpose, making children safer." 

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Peters said the new rule requires all new school buses in America to be equipped with 24-inch-high seat backs, instead of the 20-inch-high seat backs required today. Higher seat backs will help prevent taller and heavier children from being thrown over the seat in a crash, decreasing the chance of injury to them and the children in front of them. 

She added that all new school buses weighing less than five tons will be required to have three-point seat belts. She noted that the lap and shoulder belts better protect children in small buses, adding that smaller school buses are more vulnerable because they don’t absorb shock as well as larger buses. 

Peters said the federal government also was setting new standards for seat belts on large school buses. Standards will improve seat belt safety and help lower the cost of installing the belts. She cautioned, however, that seat belts on larger buses can limit capacity and force more students to walk or ride in cars to school, which is statistically more dangerous. 

"The last thing we want to do is force parents to choose other, less safe ways of getting their children to school," she said. That is why she said the federal government also would begin allowing school districts to use federal highway safety funds to pay for the cost of installing belts. 

"No school district should have to choose between books and safety," said Deputy Transportation Secretary Thomas Barrett, who outlined the new school bus rules during a visit to a Deatsville, Ala., elementary school with the state's governor, Bob Riley.   

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Barrett noted that a phone call from the governor to Peters following a November 2006 bus crash in Huntsville helped prompt the new rule. "The fact that there are so few fatalities on buses every year is little solace for a grieving parent or a saddened governor," Barrett said. 


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