Editorial: Bus safety – let's not keep waiting
OTTAWA CITIZEN EDITORIAL BOARD
Published:January 18, 2019
Updated:January 18, 2019 11:18 AM PST
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The Transportation Safety Board issued recommendations in 2015 after the crash of an OC Transpo double decker with a Via train in 2013, in which six people died. Among the problems the TSB identified was a lack of standards around “crashworthiness” for such buses.
The TSB pointed out that Transport Canada has no requirements for “frontal-impact, side-impact, rollover or crush protection” for most transit buses. The TSB also wanted buses to carry on-board data recorders (like the “black box” aboard aircraft).
Three years later, the federal government isn’t exactly moving smartly on the issue. As the TSB writes, “This deficiency file is still active.” Federal Transport Minister Marc Garneau told Postmedia this week, “We have been looking at those recommendations. We haven’t made any decisions. But that’s standard procedure.” Minister, do you think you could expedite “standard procedure” a little bit?
The federal government isn’t exactly moving smartly on the issue.
True, the feds will require certain types of buses to have seatbelts starting in 2020, and standards have been introduced for greater stability control on many buses. Good. But what about the broad question of making transit buses structurally safer overall?
Transport Canada writes that there isn’t much research on “structural integrity” of transit buses, “particularly as it pertains to occupant protection.” It has tried unsuccessfully to procure a “bus shell” to conduct its own testing. Now it’s exploring having industry produce “test bucks” that would simulate a bus for crash-testing purposes. There’s no tender out yet.
But surely there are other ways of going at crashworthiness: putting more onus on manufacturers right now, for instance, to show at least some improvements are being made; or setting maximum speed standards for transit buses.
Finally, there is the role of the TSB itself. More than nine in 10 transportation deaths occur on roads, but the TSB’s mandate is marine, rail, air and pipelines. Maybe Minister Garneau can talk to his provincial counterparts when they meet next week about expanding the TSB’s role. Surely the provinces, too, want safer public transit. [...]