Federal bus fatality count 'just doesn't add up'
Associated Press
The
 sleepy driver of a motor coach carrying members of the First Baptist 
Church of Eldorado, Texas, on a sightseeing tour in fall 2003 weaved 
erratically for miles before swerving off the interstate and striking a 
parked semi-truck. The impact crushed the front of the bus and ripped 
loose seats.
This crash in Tallulah, La., killed eight people 
and made national news. An investigation by the National Transportation 
Safety Board (NTSB),
 which monitors  safety and investigates crashes, blamed the fatigued 
driver — and raised broad safety concerns about inadequate federal 
oversight and poor seat design.
But if lawmakers or the public searched for the 
deaths in that Oct. 13, 2003, crash in the official statistics of motor 
coach accidents presented by the National Highway Traffic Safety 
Administration (NHTSA), they would not find them.
In its 2007 report, "NHTSA's Approach to Motor 
Coach Safety," the agency said two occupants of motor coaches died in 
2003. The agency, which is responsible for keeping track of accidents 
and fatalities, updated that number to three  in testimony March 30 
before the Senate's Surface Transportation Subcommittee.
A USA TODAY review of federal accident data, news
 reports and interviews with local law enforcement authorities 
discovered at least 14 accidents and 32 motor coach occupant deaths not 
included in NHTSA's official tally of motor coach crashes from 2003 to 
2009.
Bus safety advocate Brad Brown of Beaumont, Texas, whose daughter, Ashley, 16, was among the two members of a girl's soccer team who died in a bus accident March 30, 2006, says he isn't surprised. The number of deaths he sees reported in news stories always seemed high compared with the official statistics.
"When I just think about the deaths that I know 
about and I look at the annual data that NHTSA reports, it just doesn't 
add up," Brown says.
Issues with data
When NHTSA calculates motor coach fatalities, it relies on the massive Fatality Analysis Reporting System, or FARS, which holds detailed records of every fatal crash in the country.
The system contains no official definition for 
motor coach, so statisticians must rely on a crude approximation for 
these buses known as "Cross Country/Intercity Bus." Motor coaches are 
sometimes listed under other categories.
To some extent, NHTSA officials are hostage to 
the information they receive from local authorities. The agency has 
tried for years to improve the data reporting, holding training sessions
 for state officials who code the data.  Mistakes still occur.
In the case of the Tallulah crash, the accident 
is listed under the category "Unknown Bus Type." The NTSB labeled the 
bus a motor coach in its investigation and in a recommendation to NHTSA.
The accident that killed Ashley Brown
 reveals another issue with the FARS data. The bus carrying her soccer 
team was a slightly smaller bus the NTSB labeled "mid-size."  The NTSB 
says these buses perform trips nearly identical to the ones by motor 
coaches and have similar safety deficiencies.
Investigators found 33 occupant deaths from 2000 
through 2008 on these buses. None of these cases was included in the 
NHTSA motor coach data, the NTSB said. Nine additional deaths in these 
buses occurred in 2009, USA TODAY found.
"It's shocking to hear that this accident is not 
accounted for in determining whether to make changes in how we regulate 
transportation," Brown says of his daughter's crash.
Twist of the knife
Jessica Weishair, 16, a high school sophomore from Pelican Rapids,
 Minn., was on her way home from a band trip to Chicago on April 5, 
2008, when the school's rented motor coach went off the road and rolled.
 She was flung from the bus and crushed beneath it.
Officials who coded the accident information 
listed the vehicle as a transit bus like those used to transport people 
in cities, although it was a motor coach manufactured by Van Hool. The 
accident was not included in NHTSA's motor coach statistics.
As a result, the death was not among those cited 
in NHTSA's controversial proposal last year to require seat belts on 
motor coaches.
Weishair's father, Kim, has campaigned for 
improved bus safety since the accident. He says he thinks Jessica would 
have lived if her bus had been equipped with seat belts. When told his 
daughter's crash hadn't been counted in motor coach accidents, he said 
he was stunned.
"It really takes that knife that's sticking out 
of your heart and twists it a little bit more," Weishair says. "It's not
 going to bring her back, but I do want her counted in these 
statistics."
 
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