Third Tour Bus Crash Heightens Focus on Unsafe Operators

A third tour bus crash in a 10-day period in the Northeast has intensified concerns about the safety of the discount transportation services.

The latest accident, which occurred Monday night on a slippery highway in New Hampshire, left as many as 25 injured. But unlike the two previous accidents, which left 17 people dead and involved tour buses heading to New York City’s Chinatown, there were no fatalities.

Monday’s accident followed a weekend crackdown by New York authorities in which 164 tour buses were stopped and inspected at checkpoints in various parts of the state. It resulted in 41 tour buses being taken off the road due to serious but unspecified vehicle or driver violations, according to the New York Post.

“As proven by these enhanced checkpoints, some of these drivers had no business being behind the wheel and some of these buses had no business being on the road,” New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo told the Associated Press.

Driver fatigue is believed to be a major safety problem plaguing the industry, even though drivers are required to keep log books so they do not get behind the wheel when they are tired.

Russ Rader, a spokesman for the Insurance Institute for Highway Safety, said the records routinely are falsified. “The log books are widely known to be referred to as comic books,” he said. Safety advocates have recommended that secure electronic devices replace the written logs.

Investigators are looking into whether Ophadell Williams, the driver of the bus in the March 12 crash in the Bronx that killed 15, was asleep or distracted at the wheel. He has not been formally charged but, the New York Daily News said, officials have accused Williams of lying about his criminal background and using aliases to get a bus license.

Two days after that crash, two passengers died in a second accident involving a tour bus heading to New York from Philadelphia.

The bus that crashed in New Hampshire Monday night, in which five passengers reportedly suffered serious injuries, was carrying South Korean tourists. According to the Daily News, officials said it was foggy at the time of the crash and roads were slick from a recent snowfall.

Related Posts:
Deadly Tour Bus Crashes Spur Calls for Safety Measures
Deadly Tour Bus Crash Spotlights Driver Fatigure, Regulatory Concerns

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One comment to “Third Tour Bus Crash Heightens Focus on Unsafe Operators”

  1. dgudell

    Perhaps on the focus being on the driver, the real responsibilty should be shared with
    the tour companys with schedules that are all but impossible for the driver to be able to keep up with, and the sport teams that offer the driver little to no rest taking them to and from.
    As a former driver , I will agree that its the drivers responsibilty ,,. to get enough rest, but I know how the bussiness works.
    So when I see that a driver was envolved in an accident, due to fatigue it doesnt surprize me at all……Its about MONEY, and giving the customer all you can give and more bang for the buck.

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