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The Spokesman-Review Newspaper
Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

Funds offered for school buses

Mike Baker Associated Press

MORRISVILLE, N.C. – U.S. Secretary of Transportation Mary Peters proposed new rules Monday to improve the safety of school bus seats and expand the use of shoulder belts, but declined to order that all new buses include seat belts.

Peters rode a packed school bus to Morrisville Elementary School, among the first schools in the country to equip some of its new buses with seat belts, then said she wants to increase the height of seat backs on all school buses from 20 inches to 24 inches to help protect children during accidents.

Peters also proposed a new requirement for short school buses – the style more prone to rollover accidents – to begin using shoulder straps. For longer buses, however, she instead proposed allowing states the option of using federal highway safety funds to purchase new buses with seat belts.

But she didn’t promise that any new money would be added to those funds to help cover the costs.

“We want school districts to make that decision,” said Peters, noting that smaller buses don’t carry as many students. “They’ll make the decision about how to protect the most children within their areas.”

A new bus with seat belts costs about $10,000 more than one without the devices, said Derek Graham, a transportation services official for North Carolina schools.

The federal government gives out about $220 million in highway safety funds annually based on a formula of population and road miles. The country has about 474,000 school buses, Peters said.