Tour Bus Operator Shut Down After Deadly Virginia Crash

Federal regulators have shut down indefinitely the tour bus service involved in a Virginia crash Tuesday that killed four people and injured more than 50 others.

The move by  the U.S. Department of Transportation against Charlotte, N.C.-based Sky Express came, the agency said, after it found multiple safety regulations. “We will use every resource at our disposal to pursue and remove from our roads unsafe, reckless bus companies,” said Transportation Secretary Ray LaHood.

The agency’s Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration said Sky Express violated federal rules for driver qualifications, drug and alcohol compliance, hours-of-service and vehicle maintenance.

The bus was headed from Greensboro, N.C., to New York City’s Chinatown early Tuesday when it swerved off Interstate 95, crashed into an embankment and flipped over just north of Richmond, Va. The driver, Kin Yiu Cheung, 37, of Flushing, N.Y., was charged with reckless driving, and police partly blamed fatigue, according to the Associated Press.

The discount intercity bus industry has boomed on the East Coast in recent years, offering low-cost fares, convenient schedules and sometimes wireless Internet service. But it has been plagued by a string of fatal accidents, including one that killed 15 people in March, that have sparked calls for tighter federal regulation.

Federal records show that Sky Express has performed worse than nearly 63 percent of comparable transportation companies. Since 2009, the records show that the company has been involved in four accidents and has been cited for 46 violations of driver fatigue, the AP reported. Its drivers have received 17 unsafe-driving citations, including eight for speeding.

Related Posts:
Tougher Standards Rolled Out for Tour Bus Drivers
After Deadly Crashes, Congress Eyes Bus Safety Reforms

Print Print  

Like what we're doing? We'd appreciate your support.

Leave a comment