Saturday, April 27, 2024
ADVT 
National

Transport Canada To Take New Look At Rules, Research On School Bus Seatbelts

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 16 Oct, 2018 12:40 PM
    OTTAWA — Transport Minister Marc Garneau is ordering his department to take a fresh look at the data on school bus safety and seatbelts.
     
     
    Garneau says if seatbelts are properly used and installed on buses they can provide an additional layer of safety for riders, but notes that current seat designs already provide good safety in the event of an accident.
     
     
    The government was put on the defensive Monday after an investigation from the CBC show "The Fifth Estate" suggested federal regulations about school bus safety restraints were based on out-of-date and incomplete information.
     
     
    Canada doesn't currently require seatbelts on school buses, but did introduce new guidelines in late June to regulate their use by bus operators who choose to install them.
     
     
    Those new technical requirements say restraints must not compromise existing safety features of the compartmentalized seats specifically designed to protect school children in the event of a crash.
     
     
    A 2010 Transport Canada study says seatbelts could help prevent injuries in rollovers, crashes where a pickup truck or larger vehicle slammed into the side of a bus, or crashes causing "significant vertical lift of the occupant compartment."
     
     
    The study recommended more research on the use of seatbelts on buses to ensure their use didn't increase the risk of injury for children.
     
     
    Since 1984, there have been 23 deaths of school children involved in bus crashes, including one between 2008 and 2016, the most recent year available.
     
     
    Transport Canada says side-impact collisions that cause injuries are rare.
     
     
    However, Garneau said he was willing to take another look at the data on bus safety.
     
     
    "I have instructed my department to take an in-depth look at the question of seatbelts in buses, a fresh look based on all of the evidence that has been collected since all the way back to 1984, and I look forward to their findings," Garneau said in the House of Commons.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    B.C. Finance Minister Says Speculation And Vacancy Tax Will Tackle Housing Crisis

    The British Columbia government has introduced a speculation and vacancy tax that Finance Minister Carole James says will moderate the overheated housing market and create more homes for renters.

    B.C. Finance Minister Says Speculation And Vacancy Tax Will Tackle Housing Crisis

    Act To Create Employer Health Tax By Jan. 1, Introduced In B.C. Legislature

    VICTORIA — The British Columbia government is pressing ahead with its plan to eliminate Medical Services Plan premiums and replace them with an employer health tax.

    Act To Create Employer Health Tax By Jan. 1, Introduced In B.C. Legislature

    Canadians Prepare To Usher In Legal Pot With Parties, Protests And Puffs

    TORONTO — Trevor Pott doesn't consider himself a seasoned cannabis user, or part of the vocal community that has embarked on the decades-long battle to legalize recreational use.

    Canadians Prepare To Usher In Legal Pot With Parties, Protests And Puffs

    Armed Forces Soldier Acquitted Of Sexually Assaulting Subordinate To Face New Trial

    Armed Forces Soldier Acquitted Of Sexually Assaulting Subordinate To Face New Trial
    OTTAWA — An Armed Forces soldier acquitted of sexually assaulting a female subordinate has been ordered to stand trial again.

    Armed Forces Soldier Acquitted Of Sexually Assaulting Subordinate To Face New Trial

    'It's Like The Gold Rush,' Some Pot Shops To Stay Open Despite Threat Of Prosecution

    'It's Like The Gold Rush,' Some Pot Shops To Stay Open Despite Threat Of Prosecution
    TORONTO — Hours after marijuana becomes legal, Toronto enforcement officers will fan out across the city looking for any illegal pot shops still open — the start of a cat-and-mouse game that is expected to play out over the next six months.

    'It's Like The Gold Rush,' Some Pot Shops To Stay Open Despite Threat Of Prosecution

    Police Say Container Of Expensive Bikes Stolen In B.C. Have Shown Up In Ontario

    Police Say Container Of Expensive Bikes Stolen In B.C. Have Shown Up In Ontario
    Police in Delta, B.C., are investigating the theft of a large shipping container of high-end bikes worth up to $800,000, and say some of them have surfaced in Ontario.

    Police Say Container Of Expensive Bikes Stolen In B.C. Have Shown Up In Ontario