6 of 8 School Bus Stop Fatalities Caused by Other Vehicles in 2016-17
The latest national report shows that for three of the six passing vehicle fatalities, the bus had not yet fully stopped, so the red lights and stop arm were not activated.
Thomas McMahon・Executive Editor
January 18, 2018
In the 2016-17 school year, six loading and unloading fatalities were attributed to a vehicle passing the school bus. File photo courtesy NHTSA
3 min to read
In the 2016-17 school year, six loading and unloading fatalities were attributed to a vehicle passing the school bus. File photo courtesy NHTSA
Eight students were killed in school bus loading and unloading accidents in the last school year, according to the latest report on fatalities of this type.
The total of eight school bus danger zone deaths in the 2016-17 school year is double the number of the prior school year, 2015-16, which saw four such fatalities. There were also four in 2014-15.
Ad Loading...
The national school bus loading and unloading fatality statistics are collected annually by the Kansas State Department of Education’s (KSDE’s) School Bus Safety Unit.
In the 2016-17 school year, six of the loading and unloading fatalities (75% of the total) were attributed to a vehicle passing the school bus. In the other two incidents (25% of the total), the students were struck by their own bus — one by the right front wheel, and the other by the right dual rear wheels.
For three of the six passing vehicle fatalities, the school bus had not yet fully stopped, so the amber warning lights were activated, but the red lights and stop arm were not. Here is the KSDE report’s narrative on one of those incidents, which involved two fatalities:
“Two cousins, a 6-year-old girl and a 6-year-old boy, were running across the highway to meet the school bus. An oncoming tractor-trailer struck and killed both students. The school bus had not come to a complete stop and was displaying the eight-way amber lights.”
That incident took place in Virginia. The other school bus stop fatalities in 2016-17 occurred in Massachusetts, Minnesota, Mississippi, New York, North Carolina, and Pennsylvania.
Ad Loading...
One of the by-own-bus deaths stemmed from a student’s backpack getting snagged in the door of the bus. Here’s the narrative on that incident, which happened in Massachusetts:
“A 9-year-old girl was unloading from the bus when her backpack was caught in the service door. The student was dragged for a distance prior to the backpack coming loose. The student was struck and killed by the right rear dual wheels of the bus.”
(As reported earlier this month, the school bus driver in the Massachusetts incident pleaded guilty and was sentenced to a year in jail.)
Here are other details on the 2016-17 school bus loading and unloading fatalities from the KSDE report:
• The students who were killed ranged in age from 6 years old to 16 years old. • Six of the students were under age 10. • Four were boys, and four were girls. • Seven of the eight fatalities occurred in daylight, while one was in darkness. • Weather conditions were described as clear in seven of the fatal incidents and cloudy in one of them. • Road conditions were dry in seven of the incidents. The other one took place with snow/slush on the road. • Seven of the fatalities occurred in rural areas, and one was in an urban area.
Ad Loading...
The KSDE school bus loading/unloading survey is a collection of fatality accident records provided by the state agencies responsible for school transportation and/or accident records. Onboard fatalities are not included.
The survey is described as “an effort to raise awareness of the dangers involved in loading and unloading school children,” and the ongoing fatalities show “the continuing need for forceful, advanced instruction to school bus drivers and students, as well as the need to increase our efforts to thoroughly inform drivers across the country about the requirements of the school bus stop law.”
Driver shortages, safety expectations, and staffing limits define student transportation in 2026. New survey data shows how fleet leaders are responding.
The federal agency's report asks NHTSA to require all new school buses to be equipped with vehicle-integrated alcohol detection systems and passenger lap-shoulder belts.
Student transportation teams are being asked to do more with less, facing driver shortages, rising costs, and increasing safety expectations. This report uncovers how fleets are adapting, where technology is making the biggest impact, and why student ridership tracking is emerging as a top priority. Download the report to explore the key trends shaping 2026 and what they mean for your operation.
A Carroll County accident claimed the lives of two students and injured over a dozen others on a March 27 field trip for eighth graders at Clarksville-Montgomery County. A preliminary report adds new information to the story.
From driver shortage solutions in Tennessee and rural connectivity debates in Utah to new safety laws in Wisconsin and ongoing electric bus mandate discussions in New York and Connecticut, here’s the latest in school bus legislation across the U.S.
Waymo’s self-driving vehicles are under fire again after repeated school bus passing violations, raising questions about safety, remote operators, and regulation.
Distracted driving continues to pose serious risks in school zones, with new data and driver insights highlighting ongoing concerns and potential solutions to improve student and roadway safety.
A former airline pilot has stepped into a new role at the independent federal agency, but where does he stand on issues like seat belts on school buses? Here’s what he’s said.
Two recent close calls at railroad crossings, a train clipping a bus and a rear-end crash, highlight why vigilance and training still matter. Here’s what happened and what to tell your own drivers.
The federal agency's proposed rulemaking would eliminate the requirement for school buses to come to a complete stop at railroad crossings if the warning device is not activated. The goal: to improve traffic flow and save costs. With new data released, public comment is open through April 27, 2026.