We are in favor of seat belts...
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We are in favor of seat belts in school buses. We believe this is a
good thing and should have been done many, many years ago.
JAY and ANNE GREER
Newport Beach
My youngest is 22 years old now. She has never gotten in a vehicle
without a seat belt. I can’t imagine anybody that would want their
kids riding in a school bus without them.
RICK LLOYD
Huntington Beach
I’m horrified that Newport-Mesa officials would consider a safety
measure for their students to be unnecessary. My parents always
required me to wear a seat belt, even before state law mandated it.
As a child I felt uncomfortable not having seat belts on school
buses, and I support those parents who want seat belts to protect
their children.
URSULA BOHEN
Costa Mesa
In support of the view that a new state law requiring lap-shoulder
belts in newly purchased school buses is undesirable or unnecessary,
Newport-Mesa School District spokeswoman Jane Garland cited a recent
sport-utility vehicle versus Newport-Mesa Unified School District
school bus accident and said: “The bus was so high, the car basically
did not impact anywhere where the children were seated.”
That illustration fails to deal with another major risk.
No matter how much the bus weighs or how high it stands, “school
buses are, in themselves, kind of tanks,” Garland said. Imagine the
consequences when the occupants are not restrained in place when the
“tank” or bus hits head on a utility pole or other very large object,
such as an 18 wheeler. The occupants will be thrown forward from
their seats striking their faces, necks, chests, abdomens, arms and
legs against the seats in front of each of them. We all know what
injuries would result.
If the school district replaces six or seven buses a year (the
district’s expectation based on experience), the annual expense would
be $36,000 to $42,000.
That’s a very acceptable expense to eventually bring the bus fleet
to an acceptable level of readiness to prevent serious injuries or
worse. The sooner accomplished the better.
DAVID J. STILLER
Costa Mesa
If we can’t get our children to and from school safely then what
do we gain by educating them?
Granted, the Daily Pilot question is more complex than it
originally seems, the arguments for having seat-belts predominate:
1. Just because we haven’t yet had a catastrophe doesn’t guarantee
we won’t. The odds say we ultimately will! One anecdotal positive
outcome from a local crash in 2004 does not confer invincibility or
immunity. Besides, what if the school bus is hit by another bus or
sideswiped by a train?
2. If we spend $10,000 a year per student on education and $180 to
bus them, the incremental cost to provide belts is a small percentage
of total costs.
3. Our roads grow more dangerous as the number of persons and
vehicles mount and our driving habits become more suicidal and
homicidal. The number of people driving without licenses and
insurance is increasing. The need to drive defensively and take more
precautions increases second by second.
4. Having taken a generation to teach our youth to use belts, why
ask them to ride in a school bus without them? Talk about conflicted
messages.
5. An expert from out of state told me that accidents involving
vans, super vans (“church mobiles”) and buses without seat belts can
be very severe. Lets not forget that the other vehicles in a crash
(“the crasher”) grow more humongous every month.
6. All of this commotion is irrelevant if the California state law
remains in effect.
7. If a tragedy and serious injuries with deaths were to occur on
a bus without belts, the legal costs would dwarf the relatively
minuscule belt costs. The fact that this issue had been discussed in
an open forum without making the required changes would make
Newport-Mesa and all of us more liable.
In sum, in our attempt to educate our children, it makes little
sense not to provide them the same safety features and defense
mechanisms that we require of ourselves.
MICHAEL ARNOLD GLUECK
Newport Beach
If I had children riding a bus I would definitely want them to
have a seat belt because they’d get used to using it. If they use
belts in their parents’ cars, why not on the bus? There is still the
possibility of accidents -- getting hit by a truck, another bus, the
driver having a heart attack, driver making a mistake. Nobody’s
perfect. It would keep the kids in the seat where they belong, too,
so they’re not roaming around; you know how kids are. I think it’s a
no-brainer: Yes, the kids should have seat belts on the bus.
FRED R. BOCKMILLER
Costa Mesa
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