SUN EDITORIAL:
Protecting the public
Foreign-made buses entering from Mexico should meet safety performance standards
Sat, Oct 11, 2008 (2:07 a.m.)
Federal regulations require foreign-made buses to meet American safety performance standards. But a disturbing loophole has been discovered that has allowed unsafe foreign-made buses to enter this country from Mexico.
As reported Wednesday by the Associated Press, the requirement that imported buses go through a registration process to ensure they are safe for U.S. highways has not been applied in cases where the vehicles are used for international trade. The consequences have been tragic.
In January a Volvo bus was involved in an accident in Texas that killed one man and injured several other people. The bus traveled daily between Houston and Monterrey, Mexico, engaged in international trade and therefore exempt from the safety standards. The wreck is still under investigation, but National Transportation Safety Board member Debbie Hersman told the AP the loophole is “big enough to drive a bus through.”
Of the 60 fatal bus accidents in this country over the past 10 years, 11 involved buses that were unsafe or illegal, American Bus Association Vice President Norm Littler said. Those 11 wrecks accounted for 129 of the 229 fatalities.
Blame should be directed at the Bush administration, which in 2005 withdrew a rule proposed three years earlier by then-Transportation Secretary Norman Mineta that would have extended the safety standards to buses crossing from Mexico. Border inspectors check bus brakes for wear or defects but do not have the training to determine whether the brakes meet stopping distance requirements or whether the seats meet flammability standards, the AP reported.
This loophole should be closed immediately to protect the public. Any bus entering this country, regardless of its purpose, should meet the same safety standards that are placed on American-made buses.
Discussion: 1 comment so far…
Post a comment
- Most Read
- Discussed
- Most E-mailed
- Economy poses test for The Strip’s big night
- State recommends 18 years for Simpson
- Chief who set new course for LVAM is out, suddenly
- Henderson to offer buyouts to city employees; layoffs possible
- Weighty issues solved: De La Hoya, Pacquiao ready
- Historic night on tap for Mexican/American MMA fighters
- Builder sees green light in red-flag economy
- What Gibbons would say to Obama
- Harrah’s vice chairman stepping down
- A recession-proof fight? Promoter thinks so
Blogs
Politics: The Early Line
Mining industry asked to pre-pay tax in budget deal
Now and Then
Traffic school film a blast from the past
Sports: UNLV
UNLV to host seven football recruits this weekend
Joe Brown
Vegas hometown boy Ne-Yo gets 4 Grammy nominations
Year-end list of year-end lists
Politics: The Early Line
Director: Yucca nuke dump an 'extreme stretch'
Culture and Entertainment
Top country acts to perform at NFR in Las Vegas
Bloggity, Bloggity, Bloggity
Sprint Cup racing should be affordable entertainment (13 Comments)
Calendar
- National Finals Rodeo at the Thomas and Mack Center (9 a.m. to 10 p.m.)
- Captain Bree, Scourge of the Seaat Green Valley Christian Center (6 p.m. to 8 p.m.)
- Blues Storm at the Sand Dollar Lounge (9:30 p.m. to 11:59 p.m.)
- Tracy Letts' Bug at The Onyx Theater (7 p.m. to 10 p.m.)
The Sun
Locally owned and independent for more than 50 years.


This is about restricting trade and driving up prices, nothing more.