Federal Motor Vehicle Safety Standards for School Bus Passenger Protection, 30739-30742 [E7-10568]
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that might be of general interest to the
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Management Office, in the exercise of
that officer’s discretion and
administrative authority, may seek
clarification from the third party prior to
any or all releases.
§ 1700.13
Allocation of resources.
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(a) In general. ODNI shall devote such
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§ 1700.14 Requests for expedited
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(b) Procedure. Requests for expedited
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The words ‘‘FOIA APPEAL’’ should be
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§ 1700.16
30739
Action by appeals authority.
(a) The Director of the Intelligence
Staff, after consultation with any ODNI
component organization involved in the
initial decision as well as with the
Office of General Counsel, will make a
final determination on the appeal.
Appeals of denials of requests for
expedited processing shall be acted on
expeditiously.
(b) The Director, Information
Management Office, will ordinarily be
the initial deciding official on FOIA
requests to the ODNI. However, in the
event the Director of the Intelligence
Staff makes an initial decision that is
later appealed, the Principal Deputy
Director for National Intelligence will
decide the appeal in accordance with
the procedures in this section.
Dated: May 17, 2007.
David Shedd,
Acting Director of the Intelligence Staff.
[FR Doc. E7–10420 Filed 6–1–07; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 3910–A7–P
DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION
National Highway Traffic Safety
Administration
49 CFR Part 571
[Docket No. NHTSA–2007–28103]
Federal Motor Vehicle Safety
Standards for School Bus Passenger
Protection
National Highway Traffic
Safety Administration (NHTSA),
Department of Transportation (DOT).
ACTION: Notice of public meeting,
request for comments.
AGENCY:
SUMMARY: NHTSA is having a public
meeting to bring together a roundtable
of State and local government
policymakers, school bus and seat
manufacturers, pupil transportation
associations, and public interest groups
to discuss the issue of seat belts on large
school buses. The discussion on how
best to provide safety during a crash, by
compartmentalization or through the
use of seat belts, has been ongoing for
many years. This public meeting is an
opportunity for an exchange among
interested parties, as well as the public,
on the safety, policy and economic
issues related to the use of seat belts on
school buses. The date, time, location,
and framework for this public meeting
are announced in this notice.
DATES: Public Meeting: The public
meeting will be held on July 11, 2007,
from 8:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. at L’Enfant
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Plaza Hotel, 480 L’Enfant Plaza, SW.,
Washington, DC.
Comments: Written comments may be
submitted to the agency and must be
received no later than September 10,
2007.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Ms.
Harriett Fitzgerald, Office of
Crashworthiness Standards, NHTSA,
telephone 202–366–3269, e-mail
Harriett.Fitzgerald@dot.gov, or Mr. John
Hinch, Director, Office of Human
Vehicle Performance Research, NHTSA,
telephone 202–366–5195, e-mail
John.Hinch@dot.gov. Both officials may
also be reached at 1200 New Jersey
Ave., SE., Washington, DC 20590.
ADDRESSES: Public meeting: The public
meeting will be held at L’Enfant Plaza
Hotel, 480 L’Enfant Plaza, SW.,
Washington, DC 20024, telephone: 202–
484–1000.
Written comments: Written comments
on this meeting and topic must refer to
the docket number of this notice and be
submitted by any of the following
methods:
• Web Site: https://dms.dot.gov.
Follow the instructions for submitting
comments on the DOT electronic docket
site.
• Fax: 1–202–493–2251.
• Mail: Docket Management Facility;
U.S. DOT, 1200 New Jersey Ave., SE.,
West Building, Room W12–140,
Washington, DC 20590. Hand Delivery:
1200 New Jersey Ave., SE., Washington,
DC 20590, between 9 a.m. and 5 p.m.,
Monday through Friday, except Federal
holidays.
• Federal eRulemaking Portal: Go to
https://www.regulations.gov. Follow the
online instructions for submitting
comments.
You may call Docket Management at
202–366–9317 and visit the Docket from
10 a.m. to 5 p.m., Monday through
Friday.
Note that all comments received will
be posted without change to https://
dms.dot.gov, including any personal
information provided. Please see the
Privacy Act discussion under the
heading ‘‘How do I prepare and submit
comments?’’ at the end of this notice.
Please see also the discussion there of
confidential business information.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Background
In the School Bus Safety Amendments
of 1974, Congress indicated that school
transportation should be held to the
highest level of safety, since such
transportation involves the Nation’s
most precious resource—children who
represent our future.
During the mid 1970’s, to address the
safety of school bus passengers in a
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crash, NHTSA established Federal
Motor Vehicle Safety Standards
(FMVSS’s) to increase the strength of
school buses and to improve occupant
protection. Three standards addressing
rollover protection, body joint strength,
and passenger seating and crash
protection are unique to school buses.
Another six standards have additional
requirements that specifically provide
for the protection of school bus
passengers. Still other standards, such
as brakes, tires, fuel system integrity and
other safety related systems, ensure that
school buses meet rigorous
requirements for safety when it comes to
avoiding a crash in the first place, or
enhancing survivability in the event of
a crash.
Under existing regulation, the primary
means of occupant protection for large
school buses is a safety concept known
as compartmentalization.
Compartmentalization protects
occupants by using strong, closely
spaced seats equipped with high,
absorbing seat backs.
Compartmentalization provides passive
protection, meaning that the protection
is there when needed without the need
for passengers to take any action such as
buckling a seat belt. This system has
proven very effective at preventing
serious injuries and fatalities for school
aged passengers.
Current data collected by NHTSA
show that every year, approximately
482,000 public school buses
transporting 25.5 million students to
and from school and school-related
activities 1 travel an estimated 4.3
billion miles.2 The school bus occupant
fatality rate of 0.2 fatalities per 100
million vehicle miles traveled (VMT) is
much lower than the overall rate for
motor vehicles, which is 1.5 per 100
million VMT. An average of 21 school
age passengers die in school
transportation-related crashes each year:
6 school bus passengers and 15
pedestrians. NHTSA estimates that there
are approximately 8,000 crash related
injuries in the school buses each year.
Approximately half of both the crashes
and fatalities occur in frontal
collisions.3
Seat Belts on School Buses
NHTSA published the final rule
establishing FMVSS No. 222, ‘‘School
bus seating and crash protection,’’ on
January 28, 1976 (41 FR 4016). This
1 School Transportation News, Buyers Guide
2005.
2 School Bus Fleet 2005 Fact Book.
3 DOT HS 810 626 Traffic Safety Facts 2005,
School Transportation-Related Crashes. U.S.
Department of Transportation, National Highway
Traffic Safety Administration.
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regulation became effective for all newly
manufactured school buses on and after
April 1, 1977. In the rulemaking leading
to the 1976 final rule, four notices of
proposed rulemaking (NPRM) were
published.4 Throughout the course of
that rulemaking, the issue of requiring
seat belts and/or belt anchorages on
large school buses was considered.
Although the agency ultimately decided
not to require safety belts or anchorage
systems because compartmentalization
provided very effective safety protection
for school children, the final rule did
not prohibit State and local jurisdictions
from installing seat belts. Providing seat
belts on buses will not, by itself,
improve safety for school bus
passengers. If seat belt systems are to be
effective, States and local jurisdictions
would need to ensure that they are worn
properly by all passengers.
Since the implementation of their
respective State laws, New York (1987),
New Jersey (1994) and Florida (2001)
have required lap belts, and California
(2005) has required lap and shoulder
belts, on all newly purchased school
buses. NHTSA does not maintain a
record of local school districts that also
may require seat belts on buses.
However, a 1994 University of South
Florida (USF) study 5 found that many
districts might require such systems
even though it was not mandatory in
their State at the time of the study. At
the time of the USF study, only New
York required seat belts in all school
buses.
In 1987, the National Transportation
Safety Board (NTSB) reported on a
study of forty-three post-standard school
bus crashes investigated by the Safety
Board.6 NTSB concluded that most
fatalities and injuries in school bus
crashes occurred because the occupant
seating positions were directly in line
with the crash forces, and that seat belts
would not have prevented those injuries
and fatalities. In 1999, NTSB reported
on six school bus accidents it
investigated in which passenger
fatalities or serious injuries occurred
away from the area of vehicle impact.7
NTSB again found
4 February 22, 1973 (38 FR 4776), July 30, 1974
(39 FR 27586), April 23, 1975 (40 FR 17855) and
October 8, 1975 (40 FR 47141).
5 ‘‘To Belt or Not To Belt, Experiences of School
Districts that Operate Large School Buses Equipped
with Seat Belts,’’ Final Report, August 1994, Center
for Urban Transportation Research, College of
Engineering, University of South Florida.
6 Safety Study—Crashworthiness of Large Post
standard School Buses; National Transportation.
Safety Board Report No. NTSB/SS–86/03,
Washington, DC, 1987.
7 Highway Special Investigation Report—Bus
Crashworthiness Issues; National Transportation.
Safety Board Report No. NTSB/SIR–99/04,
Washington, DC, 1999.
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compartmentalization to be an effective
means of protecting passengers in
school bus crashes. However, because
many of those passengers injured in the
six crashes were believed to have been
thrown from their compartments, NTSB
believed other means of occupant
protection should be examined. A 1989
National Academy of Sciences (NAS)
study 8 concluded that the overall
potential benefits of requiring seat belts
on large school buses were insufficient
to justify a Federal mandate for
installation. The NAS also stated that
funds used to purchase and maintain
seat belts might be better spent on other
school bus safety programs with the
potential to save more lives and reduce
more injuries.
In laboratory simulations of a severe
frontal impact crash, NHTSA
determined that adding lap belts on
large school buses would have little, if
any, benefit in reducing serious-to-fatal
injuries in severe frontal crashes, and
could raise the potential risk for head
injury.9 But at the same time, lap belts
have been on large school buses for over
30 years without any documented
serious injuries resulting from the use of
the seat belt restraint systems. NHTSA’s
laboratory simulations also showed that
the use of combination lap/shoulder
belts, if properly worn, could provide
some safety benefit to both large and
small school bus occupants regardless of
their size. However, incorporation of
lap/shoulder belts can significantly
reduce the seating capacity of school
buses.
Upon completion of the laboratory
simulations, NHTSA issued a press
release stating that as a result of
research findings, the agency was
considering the following changes to the
existing Federal safety standards:
• Increasing the seat back height from
508 mm (20 inches) to 610 mm (24
inches) to reduce the potential for
passenger override 10 in the event of a
crash.
• Requiring school buses with a gross
vehicle weight rating (GVWR) of 4,536
kg (10,000 pounds) or less to have lap/
shoulder restraints. (Currently, seats on
these buses must be equipped with lap
belts only.)
• Developing standardized test
procedures for voluntarily installed lap/
shoulder belts.
8 Special Report 222: Improving School Bus
Safety, National Research Council, Washington, DC,
1989.
9 School Bus Safety: Crashworthiness Research,
National Highway Traffic Safety Administration,
April 2002.
10 Override means an occupants head or torso
translates forward beyond the forward seat back
providing compartmentalization.
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Subsequently, the agency has
developed performance requirements to
support a notice of proposed rulemaking
that would upgrade the school buses
Federal safety standards accordingly.
School Transportation Safety Risks
In July 2002, NAS published Special
Report 269, ‘‘The Relative Risks of
School Travel: A National Perspective
and Guidance for Local Community
Risk Assessment, National Research
Council.’’ 11 The study analyzed the
safety of various transportation modes
used by school children to get to and
from school and school-related
activities. The report concluded that
each year there are approximately 800
school-aged children killed in motor
vehicle crashes during normal school
drive time hours in the various modes
of transportation.12 About 2 percent
were school bus-related, and 11 percent
were children walking or bicycling; the
majority of the fatalities were children
in passenger cars, especially those with
teen drivers. The report stated that the
risk factors associated with these modes
are complex and highly interrelated.
Changes in any one characteristic of
school travel can lead to dramatic
changes in the overall risk to the student
population. For example, anything that
would reduce the number of school bus
riders (including reduced seating
capacity) could lead to more students
seeking a less safe alternative form of
transportation for getting to and from
school. Thus, it is important for school
transportation decisions to take into
account all potential aspects of changes
to requirements to school
transportation.
Public Meeting
There is continuing public interest
and discussion of on whether seat belts
should be required on large school
buses. NHTSA is having this public
meeting to discuss the safety, policy and
economic issues associated with the use
of seat belts in large school buses. The
meeting will bring together State and
local government policy makers,
industry associations, school bus and
equipment manufacturers, consumer
advocates, and school transportation
providers.
The meeting will be open to the
public, but participation in the panels
will be by invitation only. Time will be
11 Special Report 269: The Relative Risks of
School Travel: A National Perspective and
Guidance for Local Community Risk Assessment,
National Research Council, Washington, DC,
September 2002.
12 These 800 fatalities were not necessarily
transportation to and from school as the destination
of the trip was not recorded.
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30741
designated for open floor discussion by
the general audience. Meeting
participants and the public are also
invited to submit comments on this
issue to the docket.
The sections below describe the
panels for the roundtable meeting. State
and Local Policy: State and local policy
perspectives regarding seat belts on
school buses will be discussed.
Panelists will address the requirements
for providing school transportation,
their considerations in determining
whether or not to require seat belts, and
the challenges faced in implementing
the use of belts on school buses.
Panelists will discuss studies or surveys
that contributed to their decisions
regarding whether or not to require belts
on large school buses. Also, the type of
seat belt system (lap or lap shoulder)
selected for use, if applicable, how that
selection was made, the effects of
reduced seating capacity in lap/
shoulder belt-equipped school buses
and any adverse effects resulting from
the need to provide transportation for
the same number of students after the
installation of belt systems will be
discussed.
Seat Belt Systems for Buses:
Information related to the type of seat
belt system designs that are currently
being offered in large school buses, and
technologies with seats or seat belts will
be presented in this panel. Discussion
during this panel will also focus on
costs of buses with and without belts,
sales, the performance specification for
seat belts used on buses, experience
with manufacturing of belts for buses,
and lessons learned from installation of
belts on buses. Manufacturers’
perspective regarding retrofitting
existing school buses with new seat
belts will also be discussed.
Economics of Belts on Buses: This
panel will focus on the economic
impact that implementation of seat belt
requirements for school buses have on
States and local school districts.
Discussion will include the purchase
and maintenance costs associated with
the seat belts in large school buses,
consequences or implications of
increased costs for belt-equipped buses,
and how school districts handle the
effects caused by the increased cost.
Discussion will also include the service
life cycle of school buses, any changes
resulting from incorporating seat belts,
and whether there are State laws/
regulations that mandate a maximum
life cycle for either the belts or buses.
Seat Belt Usage—Experience,
Education and Enforcement: For
schools and States that use seat belts on
school buses, the final panel will
discuss their experiences in training and
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educating children, parents, and drivers,
including the impact on emergency
evacuation training and procedures.
Experience in actual belt usage and
enforcement will also be included.
Finally, it has often been argued that not
requiring seat belt use on school buses
sends a mixed message about the
importance of using seat belts and
establishing a habit of buckling up.
Studies or other data to support this will
be discussed.
Procedural Matters
The meeting will be open to the
public with advanced registration for
seating on a space-available basis.
Individuals wishing to register to assure
a seat in the public seating area should
provide their name, affiliation, phone
number and e-mail address to Ms.
Fitzgerald using the contact information
at the beginning of this notice. Should
it be necessary to cancel the meeting
due to an emergency or some other
reason, NHTSA will take all available
means to notify registered participants
by e-mail or telephone.
The meeting will be held at a site
accessible to individuals with
disabilities. Individuals who require
accommodations such as sign language
interpreters should contact Ms.
Fitzgerald by June 30, 2007.
A transcript of the meeting and other
information received by NHTSA at the
meeting will be placed in the docket for
this notice at a later date.
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Tentative Agenda
8:30–9:15 a.m. Welcome and Opening
Remarks
9:15–9:45 a.m. Safety of School Buses
~ NHTSA overview
9:45–10 a.m. Break
10–11:15 a.m. Panel I. State and Local
Policy
11:15–12 p.m. Panel II. Seat Belt
Systems for Buses
12–12:30 p.m. Roundtable discussion
and questions from floor
12:30–1:30 p.m. Lunch on your own
1:30–2 p.m. Panel III. Economics of
Belts on Buses
2–2:15 p.m. Roundtable discussion
2:15–2:30 p.m. Break
2:30–3:30 p.m. Panel IV. Seat Belt
Usage—Experience, Education and
Enforcement
3:30–3:45 p.m. Roundtable discussion
3:45–4:15 p.m. Open discussion and
questions from the floor
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4:15–4:30 p.m. Closing Remarks—
Administrator Nason
How can I submit comments on this
subject?
It is not necessary to attend or to
speak at the public meeting to be able
to comment on the issues. NHTSA
invites readers to submit written
comments which the agency will
consider in its deliberations on seat
belts on school buses.
How do I prepare and submit
comments?
Your comments must be written and
in English. To ensure that your
comments are correctly filed in the
Docket, please include the docket
number of this document in your
comments.
Your primary comments must not be
more than 15 pages long (49 CFR
553.21). However, you may attach
additional documents to your primary
comments. There is no limit on the
length of the attachments.
Anyone is able to search the
electronic form of all comments
received into any of our dockets by the
name of the individual submitting the
comment (or signing the comment, if
submitted on behalf of an association,
business, labor union, etc.). You may
review DOT’s complete Privacy Act
Statement in the Federal Register
published on April 11, 2000 (Volume
65, Number 70; Pages 19477–78) or you
may visit https://dms.dot.gov.
How can I be sure that my comments
were received?
If you wish Docket Management to
notify you upon its receipt of your
comments, enclose a self-addressed,
stamped postcard in the envelope
containing your comments. Upon
receiving your comments, Docket
Management will return the postcard by
mail.
How do I submit confidential business
information?
If you wish to submit any information
under a claim of confidentiality, send
three copies of your complete
submission, including the information
you claim to be confidential business
information, to the Chief Counsel,
National Highway Traffic Safety
Administration, 1200 New Jersey Ave.,
SE., Washington, DC 20590. Include a
cover letter supplying the information
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specified in our confidential business
information regulation (49 CFR part
512).
In addition, send two copies from
which you have deleted the claimed
confidential business information to
Docket Management, 1200 New Jersey
Ave. SE., West Building, Room W12–
140, Washington, DC 20590, or submit
them electronically, in the manner
described at the beginning of this notice.
Will the agency consider late
comments?
We will consider all comments that
Docket Management receives before the
close of business on the comment
closing date indicated above under
DATES. To the extent possible, we will
also consider comments that Docket
Management receives after that date.
Please note that even after the
comment closing date, we will continue
to file relevant information in the docket
as it becomes available. Further, some
people may submit late comments.
Accordingly, we recommend that you
periodically check the docket for new
material.
How can I read the comments
submitted by other people?
You may read the comments by
visiting Docket Management in person
at 1200 New Jersey Ave., SE., West
Building, Room W12–140, Washington,
DC from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m., Monday
through Friday.
You may also see the comments on
the Internet by taking the following
steps:
Go to the Docket Management System
(DMS) Web page of the Department of
Transportation (https://dms.dot.gov). On
that page, click on ‘‘Simple Search.’’ On
the next page (https://dms.dot.gov/
search/searchFormSimple.cfm/) type in
the five-digit docket number shown at
the beginning of this notice. Click on
‘‘Search.’’ On the next page, which
contains docket summary information
for the docket you selected, click on the
desired comments. You may also
download the comments.
Authority: 49 U.S.C. 30111, 30168;
delegation of authority at 49 CFR 1.50 and
501.8.
Nicole R. Nason,
Administrator.
[FR Doc. E7–10568 Filed 6–1–07; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4910–59–P
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 72, Number 106 (Monday, June 4, 2007)]
[Proposed Rules]
[Pages 30739-30742]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: E7-10568]
=======================================================================
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION
National Highway Traffic Safety Administration
49 CFR Part 571
[Docket No. NHTSA-2007-28103]
Federal Motor Vehicle Safety Standards for School Bus Passenger
Protection
AGENCY: National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA),
Department of Transportation (DOT).
ACTION: Notice of public meeting, request for comments.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: NHTSA is having a public meeting to bring together a
roundtable of State and local government policymakers, school bus and
seat manufacturers, pupil transportation associations, and public
interest groups to discuss the issue of seat belts on large school
buses. The discussion on how best to provide safety during a crash, by
compartmentalization or through the use of seat belts, has been ongoing
for many years. This public meeting is an opportunity for an exchange
among interested parties, as well as the public, on the safety, policy
and economic issues related to the use of seat belts on school buses.
The date, time, location, and framework for this public meeting are
announced in this notice.
DATES: Public Meeting: The public meeting will be held on July 11,
2007, from 8:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. at L'Enfant
[[Page 30740]]
Plaza Hotel, 480 L'Enfant Plaza, SW., Washington, DC.
Comments: Written comments may be submitted to the agency and must
be received no later than September 10, 2007.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Ms. Harriett Fitzgerald, Office of
Crashworthiness Standards, NHTSA, telephone 202-366-3269, e-mail
Harriett.Fitzgerald@dot.gov, or Mr. John Hinch, Director, Office of
Human Vehicle Performance Research, NHTSA, telephone 202-366-5195, e-
mail John.Hinch@dot.gov. Both officials may also be reached at 1200 New
Jersey Ave., SE., Washington, DC 20590.
ADDRESSES: Public meeting: The public meeting will be held at L'Enfant
Plaza Hotel, 480 L'Enfant Plaza, SW., Washington, DC 20024, telephone:
202-484-1000.
Written comments: Written comments on this meeting and topic must
refer to the docket number of this notice and be submitted by any of
the following methods:
Web Site: https://dms.dot.gov. Follow the instructions for
submitting comments on the DOT electronic docket site.
Fax: 1-202-493-2251.
Mail: Docket Management Facility; U.S. DOT, 1200 New
Jersey Ave., SE., West Building, Room W12-140, Washington, DC 20590.
Hand Delivery: 1200 New Jersey Ave., SE., Washington, DC 20590, between
9 a.m. and 5 p.m., Monday through Friday, except Federal holidays.
Federal eRulemaking Portal: Go to https://
www.regulations.gov. Follow the online instructions for submitting
comments.
You may call Docket Management at 202-366-9317 and visit the Docket
from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m., Monday through Friday.
Note that all comments received will be posted without change to
https://dms.dot.gov, including any personal information provided. Please
see the Privacy Act discussion under the heading ``How do I prepare and
submit comments?'' at the end of this notice. Please see also the
discussion there of confidential business information.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Background
In the School Bus Safety Amendments of 1974, Congress indicated
that school transportation should be held to the highest level of
safety, since such transportation involves the Nation's most precious
resource--children who represent our future.
During the mid 1970's, to address the safety of school bus
passengers in a crash, NHTSA established Federal Motor Vehicle Safety
Standards (FMVSS's) to increase the strength of school buses and to
improve occupant protection. Three standards addressing rollover
protection, body joint strength, and passenger seating and crash
protection are unique to school buses. Another six standards have
additional requirements that specifically provide for the protection of
school bus passengers. Still other standards, such as brakes, tires,
fuel system integrity and other safety related systems, ensure that
school buses meet rigorous requirements for safety when it comes to
avoiding a crash in the first place, or enhancing survivability in the
event of a crash.
Under existing regulation, the primary means of occupant protection
for large school buses is a safety concept known as
compartmentalization. Compartmentalization protects occupants by using
strong, closely spaced seats equipped with high, absorbing seat backs.
Compartmentalization provides passive protection, meaning that the
protection is there when needed without the need for passengers to take
any action such as buckling a seat belt. This system has proven very
effective at preventing serious injuries and fatalities for school aged
passengers.
Current data collected by NHTSA show that every year, approximately
482,000 public school buses transporting 25.5 million students to and
from school and school-related activities \1\ travel an estimated 4.3
billion miles.\2\ The school bus occupant fatality rate of 0.2
fatalities per 100 million vehicle miles traveled (VMT) is much lower
than the overall rate for motor vehicles, which is 1.5 per 100 million
VMT. An average of 21 school age passengers die in school
transportation-related crashes each year: 6 school bus passengers and
15 pedestrians. NHTSA estimates that there are approximately 8,000
crash related injuries in the school buses each year. Approximately
half of both the crashes and fatalities occur in frontal collisions.\3\
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\1\ School Transportation News, Buyers Guide 2005.
\2\ School Bus Fleet 2005 Fact Book.
\3\ DOT HS 810 626 Traffic Safety Facts 2005, School
Transportation-Related Crashes. U.S. Department of Transportation,
National Highway Traffic Safety Administration.
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Seat Belts on School Buses
NHTSA published the final rule establishing FMVSS No. 222, ``School
bus seating and crash protection,'' on January 28, 1976 (41 FR 4016).
This regulation became effective for all newly manufactured school
buses on and after April 1, 1977. In the rulemaking leading to the 1976
final rule, four notices of proposed rulemaking (NPRM) were
published.\4\ Throughout the course of that rulemaking, the issue of
requiring seat belts and/or belt anchorages on large school buses was
considered. Although the agency ultimately decided not to require
safety belts or anchorage systems because compartmentalization provided
very effective safety protection for school children, the final rule
did not prohibit State and local jurisdictions from installing seat
belts. Providing seat belts on buses will not, by itself, improve
safety for school bus passengers. If seat belt systems are to be
effective, States and local jurisdictions would need to ensure that
they are worn properly by all passengers.
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\4\ February 22, 1973 (38 FR 4776), July 30, 1974 (39 FR 27586),
April 23, 1975 (40 FR 17855) and October 8, 1975 (40 FR 47141).
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Since the implementation of their respective State laws, New York
(1987), New Jersey (1994) and Florida (2001) have required lap belts,
and California (2005) has required lap and shoulder belts, on all newly
purchased school buses. NHTSA does not maintain a record of local
school districts that also may require seat belts on buses. However, a
1994 University of South Florida (USF) study \5\ found that many
districts might require such systems even though it was not mandatory
in their State at the time of the study. At the time of the USF study,
only New York required seat belts in all school buses.
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\5\ ``To Belt or Not To Belt, Experiences of School Districts
that Operate Large School Buses Equipped with Seat Belts,'' Final
Report, August 1994, Center for Urban Transportation Research,
College of Engineering, University of South Florida.
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In 1987, the National Transportation Safety Board (NTSB) reported
on a study of forty-three post-standard school bus crashes investigated
by the Safety Board.\6\ NTSB concluded that most fatalities and
injuries in school bus crashes occurred because the occupant seating
positions were directly in line with the crash forces, and that seat
belts would not have prevented those injuries and fatalities. In 1999,
NTSB reported on six school bus accidents it investigated in which
passenger fatalities or serious injuries occurred away from the area of
vehicle impact.\7\ NTSB again found
[[Page 30741]]
compartmentalization to be an effective means of protecting passengers
in school bus crashes. However, because many of those passengers
injured in the six crashes were believed to have been thrown from their
compartments, NTSB believed other means of occupant protection should
be examined. A 1989 National Academy of Sciences (NAS) study \8\
concluded that the overall potential benefits of requiring seat belts
on large school buses were insufficient to justify a Federal mandate
for installation. The NAS also stated that funds used to purchase and
maintain seat belts might be better spent on other school bus safety
programs with the potential to save more lives and reduce more
injuries.
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\6\ Safety Study--Crashworthiness of Large Post standard School
Buses; National Transportation. Safety Board Report No. NTSB/SS-86/
03, Washington, DC, 1987.
\7\ Highway Special Investigation Report--Bus Crashworthiness
Issues; National Transportation. Safety Board Report No. NTSB/SIR-
99/04, Washington, DC, 1999.
\8\ Special Report 222: Improving School Bus Safety, National
Research Council, Washington, DC, 1989.
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In laboratory simulations of a severe frontal impact crash, NHTSA
determined that adding lap belts on large school buses would have
little, if any, benefit in reducing serious-to-fatal injuries in severe
frontal crashes, and could raise the potential risk for head injury.\9\
But at the same time, lap belts have been on large school buses for
over 30 years without any documented serious injuries resulting from
the use of the seat belt restraint systems. NHTSA's laboratory
simulations also showed that the use of combination lap/shoulder belts,
if properly worn, could provide some safety benefit to both large and
small school bus occupants regardless of their size. However,
incorporation of lap/shoulder belts can significantly reduce the
seating capacity of school buses.
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\9\ School Bus Safety: Crashworthiness Research, National
Highway Traffic Safety Administration, April 2002.
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Upon completion of the laboratory simulations, NHTSA issued a press
release stating that as a result of research findings, the agency was
considering the following changes to the existing Federal safety
standards:
Increasing the seat back height from 508 mm (20 inches) to
610 mm (24 inches) to reduce the potential for passenger override \10\
in the event of a crash.
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\10\ Override means an occupants head or torso translates
forward beyond the forward seat back providing compartmentalization.
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Requiring school buses with a gross vehicle weight rating
(GVWR) of 4,536 kg (10,000 pounds) or less to have lap/shoulder
restraints. (Currently, seats on these buses must be equipped with lap
belts only.)
Developing standardized test procedures for voluntarily
installed lap/shoulder belts.
Subsequently, the agency has developed performance requirements to
support a notice of proposed rulemaking that would upgrade the school
buses Federal safety standards accordingly.
School Transportation Safety Risks
In July 2002, NAS published Special Report 269, ``The Relative
Risks of School Travel: A National Perspective and Guidance for Local
Community Risk Assessment, National Research Council.'' \11\ The study
analyzed the safety of various transportation modes used by school
children to get to and from school and school-related activities. The
report concluded that each year there are approximately 800 school-aged
children killed in motor vehicle crashes during normal school drive
time hours in the various modes of transportation.\12\ About 2 percent
were school bus-related, and 11 percent were children walking or
bicycling; the majority of the fatalities were children in passenger
cars, especially those with teen drivers. The report stated that the
risk factors associated with these modes are complex and highly
interrelated. Changes in any one characteristic of school travel can
lead to dramatic changes in the overall risk to the student population.
For example, anything that would reduce the number of school bus riders
(including reduced seating capacity) could lead to more students
seeking a less safe alternative form of transportation for getting to
and from school. Thus, it is important for school transportation
decisions to take into account all potential aspects of changes to
requirements to school transportation.
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\11\ Special Report 269: The Relative Risks of School Travel: A
National Perspective and Guidance for Local Community Risk
Assessment, National Research Council, Washington, DC, September
2002.
\12\ These 800 fatalities were not necessarily transportation to
and from school as the destination of the trip was not recorded.
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Public Meeting
There is continuing public interest and discussion of on whether
seat belts should be required on large school buses. NHTSA is having
this public meeting to discuss the safety, policy and economic issues
associated with the use of seat belts in large school buses. The
meeting will bring together State and local government policy makers,
industry associations, school bus and equipment manufacturers, consumer
advocates, and school transportation providers.
The meeting will be open to the public, but participation in the
panels will be by invitation only. Time will be designated for open
floor discussion by the general audience. Meeting participants and the
public are also invited to submit comments on this issue to the docket.
The sections below describe the panels for the roundtable meeting.
State and Local Policy: State and local policy perspectives regarding
seat belts on school buses will be discussed. Panelists will address
the requirements for providing school transportation, their
considerations in determining whether or not to require seat belts, and
the challenges faced in implementing the use of belts on school buses.
Panelists will discuss studies or surveys that contributed to their
decisions regarding whether or not to require belts on large school
buses. Also, the type of seat belt system (lap or lap shoulder)
selected for use, if applicable, how that selection was made, the
effects of reduced seating capacity in lap/shoulder belt-equipped
school buses and any adverse effects resulting from the need to provide
transportation for the same number of students after the installation
of belt systems will be discussed.
Seat Belt Systems for Buses: Information related to the type of
seat belt system designs that are currently being offered in large
school buses, and technologies with seats or seat belts will be
presented in this panel. Discussion during this panel will also focus
on costs of buses with and without belts, sales, the performance
specification for seat belts used on buses, experience with
manufacturing of belts for buses, and lessons learned from installation
of belts on buses. Manufacturers' perspective regarding retrofitting
existing school buses with new seat belts will also be discussed.
Economics of Belts on Buses: This panel will focus on the economic
impact that implementation of seat belt requirements for school buses
have on States and local school districts. Discussion will include the
purchase and maintenance costs associated with the seat belts in large
school buses, consequences or implications of increased costs for belt-
equipped buses, and how school districts handle the effects caused by
the increased cost. Discussion will also include the service life cycle
of school buses, any changes resulting from incorporating seat belts,
and whether there are State laws/regulations that mandate a maximum
life cycle for either the belts or buses.
Seat Belt Usage--Experience, Education and Enforcement: For schools
and States that use seat belts on school buses, the final panel will
discuss their experiences in training and
[[Page 30742]]
educating children, parents, and drivers, including the impact on
emergency evacuation training and procedures. Experience in actual belt
usage and enforcement will also be included. Finally, it has often been
argued that not requiring seat belt use on school buses sends a mixed
message about the importance of using seat belts and establishing a
habit of buckling up. Studies or other data to support this will be
discussed.
Procedural Matters
The meeting will be open to the public with advanced registration
for seating on a space-available basis. Individuals wishing to register
to assure a seat in the public seating area should provide their name,
affiliation, phone number and e-mail address to Ms. Fitzgerald using
the contact information at the beginning of this notice. Should it be
necessary to cancel the meeting due to an emergency or some other
reason, NHTSA will take all available means to notify registered
participants by e-mail or telephone.
The meeting will be held at a site accessible to individuals with
disabilities. Individuals who require accommodations such as sign
language interpreters should contact Ms. Fitzgerald by June 30, 2007.
A transcript of the meeting and other information received by NHTSA
at the meeting will be placed in the docket for this notice at a later
date.
Tentative Agenda
8:30-9:15 a.m. Welcome and Opening Remarks
9:15-9:45 a.m. Safety of School Buses ~ NHTSA overview
9:45-10 a.m. Break
10-11:15 a.m. Panel I. State and Local Policy
11:15-12 p.m. Panel II. Seat Belt Systems for Buses
12-12:30 p.m. Roundtable discussion and questions from floor
12:30-1:30 p.m. Lunch on your own
1:30-2 p.m. Panel III. Economics of Belts on Buses
2-2:15 p.m. Roundtable discussion
2:15-2:30 p.m. Break
2:30-3:30 p.m. Panel IV. Seat Belt Usage--Experience, Education and
Enforcement
3:30-3:45 p.m. Roundtable discussion
3:45-4:15 p.m. Open discussion and questions from the floor
4:15-4:30 p.m. Closing Remarks--Administrator Nason
How can I submit comments on this subject?
It is not necessary to attend or to speak at the public meeting to
be able to comment on the issues. NHTSA invites readers to submit
written comments which the agency will consider in its deliberations on
seat belts on school buses.
How do I prepare and submit comments?
Your comments must be written and in English. To ensure that your
comments are correctly filed in the Docket, please include the docket
number of this document in your comments.
Your primary comments must not be more than 15 pages long (49 CFR
553.21). However, you may attach additional documents to your primary
comments. There is no limit on the length of the attachments.
Anyone is able to search the electronic form of all comments
received into any of our dockets by the name of the individual
submitting the comment (or signing the comment, if submitted on behalf
of an association, business, labor union, etc.). You may review DOT's
complete Privacy Act Statement in the Federal Register published on
April 11, 2000 (Volume 65, Number 70; Pages 19477-78) or you may visit
https://dms.dot.gov.
How can I be sure that my comments were received?
If you wish Docket Management to notify you upon its receipt of
your comments, enclose a self-addressed, stamped postcard in the
envelope containing your comments. Upon receiving your comments, Docket
Management will return the postcard by mail.
How do I submit confidential business information?
If you wish to submit any information under a claim of
confidentiality, send three copies of your complete submission,
including the information you claim to be confidential business
information, to the Chief Counsel, National Highway Traffic Safety
Administration, 1200 New Jersey Ave., SE., Washington, DC 20590.
Include a cover letter supplying the information specified in our
confidential business information regulation (49 CFR part 512).
In addition, send two copies from which you have deleted the
claimed confidential business information to Docket Management, 1200
New Jersey Ave. SE., West Building, Room W12-140, Washington, DC 20590,
or submit them electronically, in the manner described at the beginning
of this notice.
Will the agency consider late comments?
We will consider all comments that Docket Management receives
before the close of business on the comment closing date indicated
above under DATES. To the extent possible, we will also consider
comments that Docket Management receives after that date.
Please note that even after the comment closing date, we will
continue to file relevant information in the docket as it becomes
available. Further, some people may submit late comments. Accordingly,
we recommend that you periodically check the docket for new material.
How can I read the comments submitted by other people?
You may read the comments by visiting Docket Management in person
at 1200 New Jersey Ave., SE., West Building, Room W12-140, Washington,
DC from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m., Monday through Friday.
You may also see the comments on the Internet by taking the
following steps:
Go to the Docket Management System (DMS) Web page of the Department
of Transportation (https://dms.dot.gov). On that page, click on ``Simple
Search.'' On the next page (https://dms.dot.gov/search/
searchFormSimple.cfm/) type in the five-digit docket number shown at
the beginning of this notice. Click on ``Search.'' On the next page,
which contains docket summary information for the docket you selected,
click on the desired comments. You may also download the comments.
Authority: 49 U.S.C. 30111, 30168; delegation of authority at 49
CFR 1.50 and 501.8.
Nicole R. Nason,
Administrator.
[FR Doc. E7-10568 Filed 6-1-07; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4910-59-P