Feds Propose New Design Rules for Buses to Reduce Rollover Crashes
The Department of Transportation’s National Highway Traffic Safety Administration recently proposed a new federal motor vehicle safety standard to protect motorcoach and other large bus passengers in rollover crashes. The proposal aims to improve the structural design of large buses to ensure that passengers are better protected in a deadly vehicle rollover by ensuring that the space around them remains sufficiently intact and the emergency exits remain operable.
The proposed standard would establish performance requirements that each new motorcoach and large bus must meet when subjected to a dynamic test in which the bus is tipped over from a raised platform onto a hard level surface.
The proposed standard would:
- Require space around occupant seating positions to be maintained to afford occupants a survivable space in a crash;
- Require the seats, overhead luggage racks, and window glazing to remain attached to their mountings during and after the test; and
- Require emergency exits to remain closed during the rollover test and operable after the test.
In a separate rulemaking action to improve safety even further, the Department is planning on finalizing requirements later this year for stability control technologies in these vehicles, which would help prevent rollovers from occurring.
“Approximately 700 million trips are taken on commercial buses each year. Raising the standard for a motorcoach’s durability is critical to saving the lives of the passengers inside,” said FMCSA Administrator Anne Ferro.
- LA Fire Survivors Got a Rude Surprise That Could Hit More Americans
- NYC Sues Delivery App Over Lost Pay in New Mamdani Crackdown
- The Return Period for An LA Wildfire-Scale Event May Be Shorter Than You Think
- Boeing 2011 Warning May Offer Clues into 2025 UPS Jet Crash