Skip navigation.
Wooten, Kimbrough & Normand, P.A.

Call Today!
1 (800) 235-7060

Hablamos Español
236 S. Lucerne Circle at Delaney · Orlando, FL 32801

Archive for October, 2009

NTSB’s New Recommendations on Bus Safety

Thursday, October 29th, 2009

The National Transportation Safety Board (NTSB) has completed its review of the tragic bus accident last August near Houston Tx where 17 passengers lost their lives and 38 others received injuries that ranged from minor to serious.

Examination of the bus indicated that it had been traveling for extended period of time with an under-inflated tire.  This caused a separation of the sidewall, belting, and body ply of the tire.  The severity of the tire failure made it impossible for the driver to control the vehicle and it hit the bridge railing. 

Adding to the gravity of the accident was the failure of the bridge railing which allowed the bus to drop about 8 feet to the ground below,  a lack of seat beat restraints for the passengers and failure of the luggage racks that prevented or slowed evacuation from the bus.

As a result of the examination of the causes of this bus accident, the NTSB has made the following recommendations:

The Federal Highway Administration should work with state officials to design new high-performance bridge railings and rehab older bridges so that they comply.

The National Highway Traffic Safety Administration was advised to:

  1. Require all new motor vehicles weighing over 10,000 pounds to be equipped with direct tire pressure monitoring systems to inform drivers of the actual tire pressures on their vehicles.
  2. Develop performance standards for newly manufactured motorcoaches to require that overhead luggage racks remain anchored during an accident sequence.
  3. Develop performance standards for newly manufactured motorcoaches that prevent head and neck injuries from overhead luggage racks.     

Other recommendations included a requirement that tire pressure be tested before any trip is made, during all vehicle inspections and at roadside inspections.  Federal officials reiterated their request that all motorcoaches should be equipped with passenger restraints, including one for children, that would protect them in the event of a bus crash.

With the hundreds of thousands of miles American travel by bus, we can only hope that these all federal officials will heed these recommendations to prevent future tragedies.

How Do Your Kids Get to School?

Monday, October 26th, 2009

If they are one of the 25 million children who ride a school bus everyday, they are 13 times safer than children using other means of transportation  to school.  On average 617 children and teens die in auto accidents, 131 die walking and 46 bicycle riders die on their way to and from school.

This is National School Bus Safety Week and it is used to promote those facts.  This year  National Association for Pupil Transportation  (NAPT) has the support of the U.S. House of Representatives “supporting the goals and ideals of National School Bus Safety Week. ”

The slogan for this year is “Avoid Harm. Obey the Stop Arm.”

The reason for the safety week is to focus on the fact that according to the NAPT -

There is no safer way to transport a child than in a school bus. Fatal crashes involving school bus occupants are rare events, even though school buses serve daily in every community. Every school day, some 475,000 yellow school buses transport more than 25 million children to and from schools and school-related activities.

Officials want more parents to realize that there is no safer form of transportation for your child getting to and from school.  Drving them yourself or allowing them to ride with  teenager is not the safer solution.  Most of the 800 children who die each year walking, biking or riding in a car to school would be alive if they had been on a school bus.

The national school bus transportation system makes approximately 10 billion trips to and from school or field trips each year.  It by far exceeds any other mass transit system in the country and it remains one of the safest.

Every day there are more than 25 million children are making that trip to school the safest way possible, shouldn’t your child be one of them?

Will Your Goblins Be Safe on Halloween?

Thursday, October 22nd, 2009

Each year thousands of children are injured as they celebrate Halloween.  The injuries can be from a simple trip and fall or much more serious if the child is hit by a car.  Children have also been injured carving jack-o-lanterns from pumpkins. 

The American Association of Pediatrics wants your child to be safe this year and has issued its recommendations on costumes, trick or treating and getting your home ready for the little monsters that come to your door.

There are several important things for you to remember when you dress your little monster, warrior or princess before they go door to door.  Probably the most important is that all young children should be accompanied by an adult.  It is the parents who can keep them the safest.  For your older children, map out a route that you want them to take and make sure they have a cell phone so they can call if there are any problems.

Second is your child should be able to see and be seen.  Hats and masks should fit the child and make sure the eye holes line up properly so they can see where they’re going.  People in cars must also be able to see your child.  Brighter costumes are better, but since a lot of children want to wear dark and scary costumes, reflective tape should be added to their shoes, trick or treating bags and even the back of the costume. 

For a complete list of safety tips for your child and how to prepare your home for the young goblins, visit the AAP website.