English Deutsch Français Italiano Español Português 繁體中文 Bahasa Indonesia Tiếng Việt ภาษาไทย
All categories

well Rob I guess your not a parent, and maybe your willing to throw your life away, but I've been on school buses when taking small groups of children to apple orchards, not a fun ride, you have a better chance of surving a roller coaster ride. If properly made, a seatbelt much like the kind that children must wear when riding in cars, can easlily be released by a button so that if the bus gets on fire or something, they can easily escape. What price do you put on a childs life.

2007-03-11 10:25:26 · 14 answers · asked by Anonymous in Pregnancy & Parenting Grade-Schooler

14 answers

they absolutely would save lives . spending a few bucks to install them would cut into the profits of the bus co . profits are more important than kids to some people .

2007-03-11 10:40:38 · answer #1 · answered by Anonymous · 0 2

You cannot put a price on a child's life.I think the main problem with seatbelts on buses (school or public buses) is enforcement. The busdriver cannot guarantee that all students( or passengers) would buckle up or even stay buckled up..The bus driver is preoccupied with driving the bus. Students can lose their bus privileges for unacceptable behaviour. If the school bus can you imagine the panic of young children trying to unbuckle their belts. They don't always open with ease.People are allowed to stand on buses and subways and they don't wear seatbelts.Why? It basically comes down to enforcement and economics. Off topic but why are people permitted to drive their convertibles and not wear a helmet. I'm not talking about the models which have a roll bar but older models.It sounds stupid I know but shouldn't they have to protect their head and eyes while driving ( like on a motorcycle).You could get dirt in the eyes, hit by flying debris,.Well something to think about.

2007-03-11 12:43:38 · answer #2 · answered by gussie 7 · 0 0

via their layout, college buses are safer with out seatbelts. a college bus is between the hardest vehicles on the line, that is no longer likely to get damaged until eventually that is hit by a huge truck. contained in the type of a crash some youngsters might want to get bumps, bruises, or probable some damaged bones besides the undeniable fact that it truly is quite uncommon for a baby to get heavily injured or killed in a college bus crash. each little thing is padded, and infant's body structure is extra useful suitable for take an outcome with no lap belt then confined with one, highly if some youngsters are confined and some are not. After a crash, it is also extra useful to have youngsters loose to flee somewhat then strapped to their seats and panicking with a buckle. also, youngsters do not positioned on seatbelts on the bus and it truly is a waste of time to attempt to cause them to. The bus driving force won't be able to be busy policing the bus extra then they already want to at the same time as they try tochronic. attempting to keep 60 youngsters buckled up should not be ordinary. On a college bus, a seatbelt is also used as a weapon. it may both choke someone, or the buckle might want to correctly be utilized like a flail or club. The type of injuries that seatbelts might want to keep is a lengthy way exceeded by the variety of latest injuries seatbelts might want to reason. there is also the fee of setting up and preserving seatbelts on each bus. youngsters are unfavourable, and the college is way less to blame by no longer providing seatbelts then they could be in the experience that they did furnish seatbelts and one failed.

2016-10-17 11:41:51 · answer #3 · answered by pataki 4 · 0 0

buses need seat belts. Headstart preschool buses have seat belts. The kids have to buckle up before the bus moves. They also unbuckle their own belts. These are 3,4,and 5 year olds. They don't have trouble unbuckling. If you look at statistics where the person died because of not buckling up versus them dieing from being trapped by a seatbelt the fatality rate is much higher from them not being buckled. It's not about requiring children to buckle up. On most school buses they don't even have the option.

2007-03-11 13:03:17 · answer #4 · answered by wsperingwasp 2 · 0 0

When I was in school our district started purchasing a new bus every year that had seat belts near the front of the bus. Some of them also had higher seats, which I guess was supposed to contain the occupants a little better in case of a crash.

But then it just stopped.

Why?

Money. It's expensive. It probably would save lives. Sure, some kids will think they're just too cool to buckle up, but some of us would have, too. But when you're talking about cost to districts who are more inclined to cut teachers and resources while promoting athletics over academics, you'll lose that battle in short order.

2007-03-11 15:55:21 · answer #5 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

I totally agree with having seatbelts on school buses. It is state law where I live to buckle up. Shouldn't that apply to young children on buses? Maybe some of the young men from the baseball team would've survived had there been seatbelts on the bus.

2007-03-11 12:02:14 · answer #6 · answered by scootzz777 2 · 1 0

In an accident, if you child has hit his/her head and is unconscious, do you want a bus driver to have to fiddle with 30-40 seat belts of children who panic when they are in a situation like that, to get your child safely off the bus? If the children that aren't hurt can safely get off, it leaves the bus driver free to help children who may be seriously injured. Another thing, have you met children these days? Do you know how many of them would use these things as weapons on the bus to hit a kid that they are bullying? I am sure that would happen at least once a day on every bus in the country!

2007-03-11 17:05:26 · answer #7 · answered by chefck26 4 · 0 0

No. Busses are built so that they wont be damaged in accedents. A rollover is the only thing that a seatbelt would help with but heres the thing: 2 kids sit in a seat with 1 lap belt
a) they will not be manditory
b.) lap belts do not save lives.

It would take a lot of money 2 re make all the schoool busses
and that funding will be in greedy teachers grubby hands
so sorry.

2007-03-11 16:47:44 · answer #8 · answered by metalstefl 3 · 1 0

You do not need a seat belt on a bus. All of the seats are right in front of each other. The whole point of a seatbelt is to keep from being thrown forward through a windshield. You dont need that if there is a nice cushy seat right in front of you.

2007-03-11 15:09:25 · answer #9 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

I could never figure out why they dont install seatbelts in buses with all those little kids in there! And their so concerned about car seatbelts. Look at all the lives not being protected on a bus!!! This has been in my mind for years. do they think its too hard to ck to make sure they are all fastened? they better get with it and get it done---Jill R

2007-03-11 10:53:00 · answer #10 · answered by Jill R 2 · 1 0

We took a church field trip on a bus that has seat belts and the bus driver recommended that the kids NOT put them on. Buses are designed so the kids go into the cushioned seat in front of them in the case of a crash. She said that in most cases, the kids are safer without them on. since they're so expensive to install, most buses don't have them.

2007-03-12 01:44:49 · answer #11 · answered by Gabby_Gabby_Purrsalot 7 · 0 0

fedest.com, questions and answers