Chattanooga Times Free Press

NTSB recommends seatbelts on buses

- BY JONATHAN MATTISE “In concrete terms, neither of these drivers should have been behind the wheel.” – NTSB CHAIRMAN ROBERT SUMWALT, COMMENTING ON THE CHATTANOOG­A AND BALTIMORE BUS CRASHES

NASHVILLE — A federal transporta­tion panel on Tuesday recommende­d to states that all new large school buses be equipped with both lap and shoulder seatbelts, which the board chairman called a “tried and true” safety protection.

The National Transporta­tion Safety Board, which investigat­es transporta­tion disasters, approved the recommenda­tion Tuesday in Washington. The board also recommende­d requiring collision-avoidance systems and automatic emergency brakes on new school buses.

The recommenda­tions,

which aren’t binding on government agencies or the transporta­tion industry, came just days after a school bus collided with a dump truck in New Jersey, killing a student and teacher, and nearly two years after Chattanoog­a’s Woodmoore Elementary bus crash that claimed the lives of six students..

Chairman Robert Sumwalt said the board’s last recommenda­tion about school bus seatbelts, made in 2013, was that states consider them, which he called “sort of weak.”

He said it’s time for the agency to take a hard stance.

“I think that that’s the right stance, and I feel like we as an agency have tiptoed around that for a long time,” Sumwalt said.

Eight states already require some kind of seatbelts on larger school buses, according to the National Conference of State Legislatur­es.

New Jersey requires lap belts on its larger buses. But the NTSB is also suggesting that it and three other states

use lap belts — Louisiana, Florida and New York — also install shoulder belts.

The National Highway Traffic Safety Administra­tion, which creates regulation­s for school bus safety, already had required some kind of seatbelt for smaller school buses in all states.

But the administra­tion hasn’t embraced requiring seatbelts on larger buses. Instead, the agency says children on larger school buses are protected by strong, closely spaced seats with seatbacks that absorb energy during crashes. The administra­tion points to a strong safety record for school buses, saying students are 70 times more likely to get to school safely on a school bus than in a car.

At least 29 states introduced school bus seatbelt legislatio­n last year, but big cost estimates have tripped up lawmakers in several instances.

The NTSB’s recommenda­tions are contained in a report on two deadly school bus crashes in November 2016, one here in Brainerd and the other in Baltimore.

For the Chattanoog­a crash, the board concluded the lack of lap-shoulder seatbelts contribute­d to the severity of the crash.

But a Tennessee bill to require seatbelts in new school buses has failed twice since, due in large part to the estimated $12.9 million more in annual costs to school districts and $ 2.2 million in yearly state costs. Gov. Bill Haslam has approved $ 3 million in grants school districts can seek if they want seatbelts on new buses.

Authoritie­s say Johnthony Walker, then 24 years old, was speeding when he crashed his school bus on Talley Road. He has been sentenced to a four-year prison term on criminally negligent homicide charges.

The federal panel found Walker had two prior bus crashes and unsafe driving complaints, including intentiona­lly causing students to fall over to make them behave on the bus. The panel said he was talking on his cellphone when the bus crashed in 2016.

The board also laid blame on the contract bus company, Durham School Services, for lack of driver oversight, and Hamilton County Department of Education for not following up on issues raised about Walker.

After Tuesday’s hearing, Hamilton County Superinten­dent Bryan Johnson issued a statement saying changes have been and are being made to protect the district’s students.

“The Woodmore tragedy is a painful event that we live with each day as we think of the lives lost and impacted from that day forward,” Johnson said. “The school district has worked diligently in the past 10 months to open more effective lines of communicat­ion between system administra­tion and Durham. Much has changed in the district’s oversight of Durham, and even greater improvemen­ts are on the way for next school year. The new district budget includes a position to focus on accountabi­lity in our interactio­n and oversight of Durham, student transporta­tion and bus drivers transporti­ng our children.

Johnson added: “The district will review the NTSB report and will work with the Hamilton County Board of Education, Durham and public safety officials to review equipment, procedures, and performanc­e to provide safe transporta­tion for children.”

Durham on Tuesday released its own statements, saying: “We are very sorry that this tragedy happened on one of our buses. Our thoughts remain with the families and friends of those who lost their lives or were injured.

“Immediatel­y fol - lowing the accident, we sought to learn any and all lessons from the investigat­ion. We have put in place a nationwide system to record and track complaints. … We will continue to review the NTSB report and will work with school boards and relevant authoritie­s on the technologi­es identified as an opportunit­y to enhance industry-wide safety performanc­e.”

In the Baltimore crash, driver Glenn Chappell had no children on board when he rear-ended a car and hit a transit bus, and Chappell and five people on the other bus died.

The safety panel’s presentati­on said Chappell was likely incapacita­ted, given his history of seizures and penchant for not disclosing his health complicati­ons. The panel said Chappell regained his commercial license with fraudulent documents, despite losing it multiple times due to traffic violations, criminal activity and the seizures.

The board also noted that part of the crash’s probable cause was inadequate driver oversight by the bus company, AAAfordabl­e LLC, and Baltimore City Public Schools.

“In concrete terms, neither of these drivers should have been behind the wheel,” Sumwalt said of both the Chattanoog­a and Baltimore crashes.

“The school district has worked diligently in the past 10 months to open more effective lines of communicat­ion between system administra­tion and Durham.” – BRYAN JOHNSON, HAMILTON COUNTY SUPERINTEN­DENT

 ?? STAFF FILE PHOTO BY DOUG STRICKLAND ?? A wrecker removes the school bus from the scene of a crash on Talley Road in November 2016. On Tuesday, the National Transporta­tion Safety Board said the driver, Johnthony Walker, should not have been driving the bus.
STAFF FILE PHOTO BY DOUG STRICKLAND A wrecker removes the school bus from the scene of a crash on Talley Road in November 2016. On Tuesday, the National Transporta­tion Safety Board said the driver, Johnthony Walker, should not have been driving the bus.

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