The new report shows that an average of 30 school-age children die in school transportation-related crashes each year. About 17% are occupants of school transportation vehicles.
Thomas McMahon・Executive Editor
May 24, 2016
From 2005 to 2014, 304 school-age children were killed in school transportation-related crashes, federal data show.
1 min to read
From 2005 to 2014, 304 school-age children were killed in school transportation-related crashes, federal data show.
An average of 30 school-age children die in school transportation-related crashes each year, according to recently released federal data.
About 17% of the children killed in these crashes are occupants of school transportation vehicles. Nearly half (43%) of the fatalities are occupants of other vehicles.
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The findings are drawn from the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration’s (NHTSA’s) May 2016 edition of School Transportation-Related Crashes.
NHTSA defines a school transportation-related crash as one that involves, either directly or indirectly, a school bus body vehicle or a non-school bus functioning as a school bus, transporting children to or from school or school-related activities.
The new report shows that from 2005 to 2014, 304 school-age children were killed in school transportation-related crashes. Of those, 53 were occupants of school transportation vehicles, 130 were occupants of other vehicles, 111 were pedestrians, nine were pedal-cyclists, and one was classified as an “other nonoccupant.”
The report also puts the school transportation-related crash data in the context of overall vehicle crashes: From 2005 to 2014, there were 331,730 fatal motor vehicle traffic crashes. Of those, 1,191 (0.36%) were classified as school transportation-related.
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