Chattanooga Times Free Press

House panel OKs seat belts for buses

- BY ANDY SHER NASHVILLE BUREAU

NASHVILLE — State Rep. JoAnne Favors’ bill requiring Tennessee school buses to be equipped with seat belts narrowly passed a House panel Tuesday amid concerns over costs and other factors.

An amended version of the bill, introduced by the Chattanoog­a Democrat after last year’s deadly Woodmore Elementary School bus crash on Nov. 21 that killed six children, narrowly passed the Transporta­tion Committee on a 9-7 vote.

It now goes to the Education Administra­tion Planning Committee where, legislator­s say, the going may get tougher.

Favors, a retired nurse, told colleagues “there’s plenty of scientific evidence to prove that restraints on school buses will minimize injuries and fatalities.”

“We have an opportunit­y to do something for the safety of children today and not push it down the road again.” –REP. BO MITCHELL, D-NASHVILLE

The lawmaker said she tried to address her original bill’s “astronomic­al costs” to state government and local school systems. Changes push back the implementa­tion mandate a year so new school buses would have to come equipped with safety restraint systems beginning July 1, 2019.

And they delete the requiremen­t that all buses must have the safety belts as of July 1, 2023. They also eliminate a seat belt retrofitti­ng provision.

Legislativ­e analysts’ fiscal note on the original bill estimated a state cost of nearly $12 million a year over five years, with a $70 million per year cost over six years for school districts.

Favors’ changes would increase state expenditur­es by $2.15 million a year going forward, with the money going to local schools. Local schools’ cost would be $12.91 million annually going forward.

Legislativ­e analysts estimate schools replace about 600 buses a year. There are an estimated 9,000 buses owned by districts or by their contractor­s.

Citing the bill’s costs, Chairman Barry Doss, R-Lawrencebu­rg, suggested to Favors that she not proceed with the measure this year and “try to get funding next year.”

But Rep. Bo Mitchell, D-Nashville, drew applause from Chattanoog­a parents, grandparen­ts and Woodmore students when he pointed to the state’s $1 billion budget surplus and said “we have an opportunit­y to do something for the safety of children today and not push it down the road again.

“We got a problem in front of us that we can solve here and now,” Mitchell said. “And I think it’s time for action.”

Committee members discussed at length concerns about various issues raised by district-level education officials in areas including how many students will actually use the belts, what liability there is for drivers or districts when they don’t and how young children or the driver would free students in instances of fires or a bus plunging into water.

A Department of Safety official said the number of school bus fatalities in Tennessee is fairly low — 10 students and one adult — over the past eight years. At the same time, he acknowledg­ed there are few bus fires.

At least two lawmakers with reservatio­ns, including Doss, voted for Favors’ bill.

Overcome by emotion, Favors, D-Chattanoog­a, thanked committee members and later engaged in a teary celebratio­n in a hallway outside the committee room with Woodmore parents and several children who survived the crash.

Favors hugged Selbrea Rhodes of Chattanoog­a, whose granddaugh­ter, Canasia Williams, was injured in the bus crash, saying she was “excited, just thrilled” the measure cleared committee. “I am so happy. I thank the committee members, the chairman … just everybody.”

Turning to her granddaugh­ter, Rhodes said, “she’s alive today by the grace of God. A lot of children are not. A lot of those parents are burying their kids.”

Canasia, a fifth-grader, suffered a concussion and injured her wrist in the crash. “I’m just happy because we’re trying to pass the bill,” the girl said.

A Hamilton County grand jury has indicted the bus driver, Johnthony Walker, on six counts of vehicular homicide, four counts of reckless aggravated assault and one count each of reckless endangerme­nt and reckless driving.

Police have said Walker was speeding in the bus, which carried 37 students, when it left a curvy section of Talley Road, struck a utility pole, overturned and slammed into a tree.

Walker worked for Durham School Services, a bus contractor.

Contact Andy Sher at asher@timesfreep­ress.com or 615-255-0550. Follow him on Twitter @AndySher1.

 ??  ?? JoAnne Favors
JoAnne Favors

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States