Ohio Father of Bus Crash Victim Praises New Law
The father of an Ohio baseball player killed in a 2007 bus crash says a new federal law will improve bus safety and save lives.
John Betts of Bryan has pushed for stronger safety measures since his 20-year-old son, David, died when a charter bus carrying Bluffton University’s baseball team flipped off a Georgia overpass. Five players, the driver and his wife were killed.
The Plain Dealer reports Betts was at a Cleveland bus station Sunday to speak about the measure signed into law Friday. It requires that new buses have seat belts and harnesses, crush-resistant roofs, flame-resistant interiors and other safety features. It doesn’t require that such features be added to existing buses.
Betts says he believes the regulations will keep others from severe injury or death.
- Hail A Growing Loss Driver on Rising Tide of Severe Convective Storm Risk, Allianz Says
- Ex-Brookfield VP Claims Wrongful Firing Over Charlie Kirk Post
- Epstein Survivor Sues US, Google Over Release of Personal Data
- Depreciation on ACV is OK, Court Says in Knocking Down Class Action vs. Cincinnati
- SeatGeek Offered ‘Retaliation Insurance’ to Win Ticketmaster Clients
- Carriers See Higher Claims Severity Amid Medical, Social Inflation and Growth in AI‑Generated Fraud
- Florida Man Faked Brain Injury for Years in Attempt to Gain $6M in Insurance
- BofA Agrees to Settle Claims It Aided Epstein Sex Crimes