[Federal Register Volume 75, Number 209 (Friday, October 29, 2010)]
[Rules and Regulations]
[Pages 66686-66698]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2010-27312]
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DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION
National Highway Traffic Safety Administration
49 CFR Part 571
[Docket No. NHTSA-2008-0613]
RIN 2127-AK49
Federal Motor Vehicle Safety Standards; Seat Belt Assembly
Anchorages, School Bus Passenger Seating and Crash Protection
AGENCY: National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA),
Department of Transportation (DOT).
ACTION: Final rule; response to petitions for reconsideration.
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SUMMARY: In this final rule, we respond to petitions for
reconsideration of a final rule published on October 21, 2008, which
upgraded NHTSA's school bus passenger crash protection requirements.
This document denies most of the requests in the petitions for
reconsideration.
To the extent we grant petitions, we make slight changes to the
regulatory text of the October 2008 final rule to clarify the rule. We
make clearer the procedure specifying how we will measure the height of
school bus passenger torso belts, and we are clarifying that a
requirement that seat belts be integral to the passenger seat (a
requirement adopted to reduce the
[[Page 66687]]
likelihood of passengers getting injured by or tangled in loose belts)
also applies to seats that have wheelchair positions or side emergency
doors behind them, even if the seats are in the last row of vehicles.
We are also slightly revising the procedure for testing the self-
latching requirement for school bus seat cushions, to specify the
weight that is placed on the seat cushion in Newtons, to specify that
the downward force is applied in a one to five second timeframe, and to
specify that activation of the self-latching mechanism is assessed
using the seat cushion retention test. Those provisions make the
language more consistent with that of a pre-existing seat cushion
retention test in the standard.
DATES: The effective date of this final rule is April 27, 2011.
Petitions for reconsideration: Petitions for reconsideration of
this final rule must be received not later than December 13, 2010.
ADDRESSES: Petitions for reconsideration of this final rule must refer
to the docket and notice number set forth above and be submitted to the
Administrator, National Highway Traffic Safety Administration, 1200 New
Jersey Avenue, SE., Washington, DC 20590.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: For non-legal issues, Mr. Charles
Hott, Office of Crashworthiness Standards (telephone: 202-366-0247)
(fax: 202-366-4921), NVS-113. For legal issues, Ms. Dorothy Nakama,
Office of the Chief Counsel (telephone: 202-366-2992) (fax: 202-366-
3820), NCC-112. These officials can be reached at the National Highway
Traffic Safety Administration, 1200 New Jersey Avenue, SE., Washington,
DC 20590.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Table of Contents
I. Background--October 21, 2008 Final Rule
II. Petitions for Reconsideration and Comments--Overview
III. Petitions for Reconsideration of Amendments Adopted by Final
Rule
a. Stringency of FMVSS No. 210 Requirements
b. Applying FMVSS No. 207 to Small School Buses
c. Minimum Lateral Anchorage Separation
d. Clarifications of Torso Anchorage Location
e. Integration of the Seat Belt Anchorages Into the Seat
Structure
f. Seat Cushion Latches
IV. Comments on Decisions Not Involving Regulatory Text
a. Requiring Large School Buses To Have Seat Belts
b. Defining a ``Small'' School Bus
c. Preemption
V. Rulemaking Analyses and Notices
I. Background--October 21, 2008 Final Rule
In a final rule published on October 21, 2008 (73 FR 62744, NHTSA
Docket No. 2008-0163), we (NHTSA) upgraded the school bus \1\ occupant
protection requirements of various Federal motor vehicle safety
standards, primarily by amending FMVSS No. 222, ``School bus passenger
seating and crash protection'' (49 CFR 571.222), and also by amending
the requirements of FMVSS No. 207, ``Seating systems,'' No. 208,
``Occupant crash protection,'' and No 210, ``Seat belt assembly
anchorages,'' relating to the strength of the seating system and seat
belt anchorages.\2\ \3\
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\1\ ``School bus'' is defined in 49 CFR 571.3 as a bus that is
sold, or introduced in interstate commerce, for purposes that
include carrying students to and from school or related events, but
does not include a bus designed and sold for operation as a common
carrier in urban transportation. A ``bus'' is a motor vehicle,
except a trailer, designed for carrying more than 10 persons. In
this final rule, when we refer to ``large'' school buses, we refer
to those school buses with gross vehicle weight ratings (GVWRs) of
more than 4,536 kilograms (kg) (10,000 pounds (lb)). These large
school buses may transport as many as 90 students. ``Small'' school
buses are school buses with a GVWR of 4,536 kg (10,000 lb) or less.
Generally, these small school buses seat 15 persons or fewer, or
have one or two wheelchair seating positions.
\2\ The October 21, 2008 final rule includes a detailed
explanation of the rationale for the rulemaking. See 73 FR 62744.
\3\ The notice of proposed rulemaking (NPRM) preceding this
final rule was published on November 21, 2007 (72 FR 65509; Docket
No. NHTSA-2007-0014).
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The final rule provided the most up-to-date information known to
the agency on seat belts on large school buses. In the final rule, we
explained the findings of NHTSA's school bus research program conducted
in response to the Transportation Equity Act for the 21st Century (TEA-
21) and discussed principles that the agency weighed about belts on
large buses. The document affirmed that States should have the choice
of ordering seat belts on their large (over 4,536 kg (10,000 pounds
(lb)) GVWR) school buses, but also affirmed that accident data and
crash research findings did not support a conclusion that a Federal
mandate for seat belts on large school buses was warranted. The final
rule adopted performance and installation requirements for voluntarily-
installed seat belts on large school buses to ensure the strength of
the anchorages and that the belts will not degrade
compartmentalization.\4\
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\4\ FMVSS No. 222 provides passenger crash protection using the
``compartmentalization'' concept. Compartmentalization ensures that
passengers are cushioned and contained by the seats in the event of
a school bus crash by requiring school bus seats to be positioned in
a manner that provides a compact, protected area surrounding each
seat. If a seat is not compartmentalized by a seat back in front of
it, compartmentalization must be provided by a padded and protective
restraining barrier. The seats and restraining barriers must be
strong enough to maintain their integrity in a crash, yet flexible
enough to be capable of deflecting in a manner which absorbs the
energy of the occupant. They must meet specified height requirements
and be constructed, by use of substantial padding or other means, so
that they provide protection when they are impacted by the head and
legs of a passenger. Compartmentalization minimizes the hostility of
the crash environment and limits the range of movement of an
occupant. The compartmentalization approach ensures that high levels
of crash protection are provided to each passenger independent of
any action on the part of the occupant.
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The October 21, 2008 final rule's most significant changes to FMVSS
No. 222 involved:
Requiring small school buses, which are currently required
to have lap belts for passenger seating positions, to have a lap/
shoulder belt at each passenger seating position (a ``lap/shoulder
belt'' is a Type 2 seat belt assembly under FMVSS No. 209 (see S3));
Increasing the minimum seat back height requirement from
508 millimeters (mm) (20 inches (in)) from the seating reference point
(SgRP) to 610 mm (24 in) for all school buses;
Incorporating performance requirements and other
specifications into the standard to ensure that lap/shoulder belts in
small school buses and voluntarily-installed lap and lap/shoulder belts
in large school buses have sufficient strength and are compatible with
compartmentalization; and,
Requiring all school buses that have seat bottom cushions
that are designed to flip up or be removable, typically for easy
cleaning, to have a self-latching mechanism.
The first three upgrades were based on the findings of NHTSA's
school bus research program, discussed in detail in the preamble to the
final rule, which the agency conducted in response to TEA-21.\5\
Requiring small school buses to have lap/shoulder belts for all
passengers and raising the seat back height on all school buses to 610
mm (24 in) makes the highly protective interior of the school bus even
safer. Further, as new designs of lap/shoulder belts intended for large
school buses are emerging in the marketplace, the third initiative will
require lap/shoulder belts to be complementary with
compartmentalization, ensuring that the high level of passenger crash
protection is enhanced and not degraded by any seat belt system.
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\5\ The fourth initiative, for self-latching mechanisms,
responds to an NTSB recommendation to NHTSA (H-84-75).
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[[Page 66688]]
II. Petitions for Reconsideration and Comments--Overview
NHTSA received petitions for reconsideration of the final rule
from: school bus manufacturers Blue Bird Corporation (Blue Bird) and IC
Bus, LLC (IC); seat manufacturers C.E. White Company (CEW) and M2K, LLC
(M2K); and from the Marietta City School District (MCSD) of Ohio. With
regard to changes to the regulatory text adopted by the October 2008
final rule, petitioners requested NHTSA to reconsider: The stringency
of the FMVSS No. 210 requirements adopted for large school buses (IC
believed the requirements were unnecessarily high); the application of
FMVSS No. 207 to small school bus seats with lap/shoulder belts (Blue
Bird believed the standard need not apply to the vehicles); the
requirement for seat width (M2K believed all seats should be allowed to
be a minimum of 257 mm (10.1 in) wide; the specifications in the final
rule for measuring the school bus torso belt adjusted height (Blue Bird
requested further clarification); the types of seats which must have
integral seat belts (Blue Bird suggested that the requirement should
apply to seats that have wheelchair positions or side emergency doors
behind them); and, the test requirements for self-latching seat
cushions (Blue Bird, M2K, MCSD).
With regard to several issues that were either outside the scope of
this rulemaking or otherwise not properly the subject of a petition for
reconsideration, NHTSA received comments from Public Citizen (PC), CEW
and IC. PC requested that the agency require lap/shoulder seat belts in
large school buses and that NHTSA investigate ``whether
compartmentalization can effectively restrain occupants in side-impact
and rollover crashes.'' CEW and IC asked NHTSA to change the GVWR cut
off delineating ``large'' school buses from ``small'' school buses,
from 4,536 kg (10,000 lb) GVWR to 6,577 kg (14,500 lb) (suggested by
CEW) or 7,257 kg (16,000 lb) (suggested by IC). PC and the American
Association for Justice (AAJ) objected to the agency's discussion in
the final rule of the assessment of the law relating to preemption of
State tort law.\6\
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\6\ Apparently interpreting the discussion as an assertion of
preemption of state tort law, AAJ objected to the discussion just as
it has objected to similar discussions in other NHTSA rulemaking
actions since 2007. Public Citizen expressed similar objections to
the preemption discussion in the preamble.
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III. Petitions for Reconsideration of Amendments Adopted by Final Rule
a. Stringency of FMVSS No. 210 Requirements
Final Rule--In the final rule, we specified one anchorage strength
requirement (i.e., 13,334 N (3,000 lb) applied to the torso and pelvic
body blocks) for both large and small school buses with lap/shoulder
seat belts. We explained in the final rule our reasons for keeping a
single requirement in FMVSS No. 210 (73 FR at 62765), notwithstanding
data from the post-NPRM testing 7 8 that indicated that a
large school bus pulse generates about 67 percent of the FMVSS No. 210
force, assuming two belted seating positions. (For three belted
positions, it was determined that the same peak dynamic load generates
44 percent of the FMVSS No. 210 force.\9\) Included among our reasons
for keeping a single requirement in FMVSS No. 210, equal to the more
severe small school bus case, was that the 13,334 N (3,000 lb) FMVSS
No. 210 requirement provides a safety margin we deem appropriate, and
that a single requirement facilitates better efficiency in the testing.
Further, NHTSA's testing and the comments from school bus seat
manufacturers led us to conclude that the 13,334 N (3,000 lb)
requirement would not be difficult to meet. We also noted that
commenters did not provide cost and weight data showing any cost
savings resulting from a reduced loading for a larger class of school
buses.
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\7\ ``NHTSA Technical Analysis to Support the Final Rule
Upgrading Passenger Crash Protection in School Buses,'' September
2008.
\8\ ``NHTSA Vehicle Research and Test Center's Technical Report
on Dynamic and Quasi-Static Testing for Lap/Shoulder Belts in School
Buses,'' September 2008.
\9\ This calculation assumes a bench seat with three fixed or
flex-seating positions and that three 5th percentile female
occupants would be generating the dynamic loading.
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With regard to safety performance, we set the requirement at 13,334
N (3,000 lb) based in part on the recognition that anchorage strength
provides the foundation upon which the restraint system is built. We
believed that there was a safety need to require the anchorages on
large school buses to meet the more stringent FMVSS No. 210 requirement
because the safety margin provided by the requirement better ensures
that the anchorages will be strong enough to deal with loading in
excess of that exerted on the anchorages in the NHTSA research program,
either because of use or misuse by larger occupants, the stiffness and
mass of the vehicle (e.g., vehicles closer in mass to a small school
bus than a large school bus will experience a more severe crash pulse),
or because the crash could be more severe than the crash
characteristics considered in the research program.
Petitions for Reconsideration--In its petition for reconsideration,
IC requested that NHTSA reduce the anchorage strength requirement from
13,334 N (3,000 lb) to \2/3\ of the small bus requirement (the current
FMVSS No. 210 requirement), due to our recognition in the final rule
that large school buses experience lower crash forces than do small
school buses. (IC had previously expressed this view in its comments on
the NPRM.) IC believed that NHTSA's testing and analysis suggest that a
more appropriate strength requirement for large school buses would be
\2/3\ of the small bus requirement. IC stated that it only builds large
school buses ``and could specifically develop a seating system that
effectively protects the occupant and is more cost effective than the
seat for a small school bus.'' Based on its conversations with current
seat suppliers, IC estimated that there could be a cost savings to a
school district of $10-$15 per seat, or $220-$330 per typical 66
passenger bus. The petitioner stated that setting the FMVSS No. 210
requirement higher than necessary will drive up the cost of vehicles.
NHTSA's Response--We are denying IC's request. The petitioner's
views are repetitive of views it expressed in comments to the NPRM, to
which NHTSA responded in the preamble of the final rule (73 FR at
62765).
We reiterate the agency's position discussed in the final rule. We
agree that the mass of the bus plays an important role in the amount of
force that seat belt anchorages undergo in a crash. However, as we
explained in the final rule preamble, we did not and do not believe
that the data from the school bus research program should be used to
define the upper bounds of the performance that should be prescribed
for the seat belt anchorages. The frontal crash test into a fixed rigid
barrier represents a crash between two vehicles of the same weight. The
data, generated from a controlled laboratory environment, are
inherently bounded to some degree in representing the force to which
the anchorages could be exposed in a real-world environment.
In the laboratory sled test, the force measured on the anchorages
was produced using test dummies of a certain mass, a crash pulse of a
certain severity, and particular school bus seats. The final rule
referenced sled tests with 50th percentile male dummies in school bus
seats and a crash pulse representing a 30 mph full frontal rigid
barrier crash
[[Page 66689]]
test of a 71 passenger Type C (conventional) school bus. The GVWR of
this bus was 13,154 kg (29,000 lb) and the seat anchorage loads
obtained were specific to the type and weight of the bus, crash type,
and the size of the seated occupants. The anchorage loads would be
higher for larger occupants (such as 95th percentile adult males which
correspond to the size of some high school football players) and school
buses closer in weight to a small school bus than the larger Type C
school bus. As discussed in the final rule, since anchorage strength
provides the foundation upon which the restraint system is built, there
is a vital need to require the anchorages to meet the more stringent
yet practicable FMVSS No. 210 requirements to ensure an adequate safety
factor. Having this safety margin better ensures that the anchorages
will be strong enough to withstand loads in excess of the load produced
by the sled test, loads possibly resulting from ``worst case''
scenarios, e.g., the use or misuse of the seat belts by larger
occupants, use of an inordinately stiff and heavy seat, or a collision
of high severity.
The 13,334 N (3,000 lb) FMVSS No. 210 load has been used to test
seat belt anchorages for decades. Seat belt anchorages certified as
meeting the requirements have a reliable and proven safety record. Our
testing indicated that the same FMVSS No. 210 strength requirements for
small and large school buses are practicable and would not be difficult
to meet, a finding which was supported by comments from school bus seat
manufacturers. While the crash pulse experienced by large school buses
may be less severe than that of small school buses in similar
collisions, applying the FMVSS No. 210 loads to seat belts that are
voluntarily installed on large school buses will increase the
likelihood that any seat belt that is installed will perform well under
a wide range of crash conditions, occupant sizes, and seat belt use/
misuse conditions.
Although it may appear that the anchorages of large school bus
seats are required to be designed to a greater safety margin than those
of small school bus seats, it is important to note that the additional
FMVSS No. 207 seat inertial loading is only applied to small school bus
seats during the FMVSS No. 210 test. We estimated that the combined
FMVSS No. 210 and FMVSS No. 207 loads applied simultaneously exceed the
actual measured total dynamic load on a small school bus seat with
three seating positions by 50 percent and is approximately equivalent
to the actual dynamic loads on a seat with two seating positions.\10\
This additional FMVSS No. 207 seat load is not applied to large school
bus seats--in part due to the wider safety margin (133 percent)
associated with the FMVSS No. 210 strength requirement.
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\10\ See 73 FR at 62758.
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IC stated in its petition that most, if not all, bus manufacturers
already build in a ``safety margin'' when producing their vehicles to
ensure that the vehicle will meet the requirements in a compliance
test, and so the ```safety margin' that NHTSA has built into the
regulation is compounded by the vehicle manufacturer's safety margin.''
While we are encouraged to know that some manufacturers build a safety
margin in their vehicles, the agency cannot rely on a safety margin
that is voluntary on the part of the manufacturer for its regulations.
IC presented no new data that supports its position that the
anchorage strength for large school buses should be less than that for
small school buses, except for an estimate of cost savings for a ``two-
thirds load seat,'' which we find tenuous. As IC itself noted in its
petition, ``At this time it is difficult to accurately estimate the
potential cost savings that would be associated with seating systems
that meet \2/3\ of the current FMVSS 210 requirement because such
seating systems are not currently designed or available.''
Cost savings in the range of $10-$15 per seat appears high; the
petitioner did not submit information explaining the basis for this
cost estimate. As stated in the final rule preamble, we do not believe
it is difficult from an engineering standpoint to meet the FMVSS No.
210 load requirement. We are not convinced that a two-thirds load seat
would be engineered that differently from a full load FMVSS No. 210
seat. Further, as explained above, even if the seats are different, we
believe that any added structure or reinforcement of the seat is a
necessary measure to increase the likelihood of adequate performance of
the seat and seat belt anchorages in misuse situations or in severe
crashes.
IC further stated that the loading requirement for a flex seat,
which has a seating position designed for a small occupant, should not
be required to meet the same loading requirements as the current FMVSS
No. 210. IC suggested that the load requirements for the ``small
occupant seating position'' (see definition, FMVSS No. 222) be based on
the weight of a 95th percentile 10-year-old multiplied by the measured
pulse deceleration, which the petitioner suggested to be 13.5 g.
We are maintaining the FMVSS No. 210 anchorage load requirements at
all flex-seat seating positions even though we acknowledge that some of
the seating positions may likely contain smaller riders (and not
exclusively larger riders) when the seat is at full capacity. However,
as previously stated, anchorage strength provides the foundation upon
which the restraint system is built and so providing a higher factor of
safety as it relates to the applied test load for large occupants is
not unreasonable. We established that our standard requires a minimum
level of anchorage strength for larger occupants (or larger students)
since it is conceivable that, when riding alone, they may have the
option to sit in the center seating position of a flex-seat, for
example, where the seat belt anchorage may potentially be loaded to a
relatively high level in a crash scenario. Additionally, our testing of
flex-seats suggests that there are no practicability concerns for
meeting the FMVSS No. 210 load requirements.
IC suggested that there is a ``distinctive difference'' between
school buses with a GVWR greater than 7,257 kg (16,000 lb) as compared
to school buses with a GVWR less than or equal to 7,257 kg (16,000 lb).
``School buses with a GVWR of less than 16,000 lbs. are most often
based on a passenger or light truck vehicle. School buses with a GVWR
greater than 16,000 lbs. are most often an integrated vehicle designed
specifically for that application and components and systems are
usually similar to medium and heavy duty trucks.'' IC stated that if
NHTSA is not inclined to lower the FMVSS No. 210 strength requirement
for school buses greater than 4,536 kg (10,000 lb) GVWR, IC petitioned
to change the requirement for school buses with a greater than 7,257 kg
(16,000 lb) GVWR to two-thirds of the current FMVSS No. 210 strength
requirement.
NHTSA is declining IC's suggestion to lower the FMVSS No. 210
strength requirements for school buses with a GVWR greater than 7,257
kg (16,000 lb) for the same reasons we have denied IC's petition to
lower the FMVSS No. 210 requirements for large school buses overall.
The crash pulse used in our sled tests where the maximum seat anchor
loads during the sled tests were approximately two-thirds of those in a
FMVSS No. 210 test was that of a school bus with a GVWR of 13,154 kg
(29,000 lb) in a frontal crash into fixed rigid barrier. The seat
anchor forces would be greater than those measured in the sled tests
with a more severe crash pulse (e.g., a lighter school bus crashing
into a heavier and stiffer vehicle) and with
[[Page 66690]]
heavier occupants in heavier seats. IC provided no data to suggest that
school buses with a GVWR greater than 7,257 kg (16,000 lb) will have
seat belt anchorage loads two-thirds that of the current FMVSS No. 210
requirement under all passenger and crash conditions. We believe that a
single criterion for application of FMVSS No. 210 loads to school bus
seats is practicable. The anchorage strength provides the foundation
upon which the restraint system is built and so providing a higher
factor of safety as it relates to the applied test load for large
school buses is not unreasonable. In addition, we are not applying the
additional FMVSS No. 207 seat inertial loads to large school buses due
to the wider safety margin associated with the uniform FMVSS No. 210
requirement. We require the additional FMVSS No. 207 loads to be
applied simultaneously with the FMVSS No. 210 loads for small school
buses.
With regard to IC's suggestion that the GVWR cut-off between large
and small school buses should be set at a higher GVWR level, the
agency's response to this and a related CEW suggestion is discussed
later in this preamble. The agency is declining to make the change in
this final rule.
In conclusion, for the reasons discussed above, we have determined
that the FMVSS No. 210 loading requirement is appropriate for seat
belts voluntarily installed on large school buses. Therefore, in this
final rule, we will not lower the seat belt anchorage loads for large
school buses.
b. Applying FMVSS No. 207 to Small School Buses
Final Rule--In the final rule, we decided it was necessary to apply
FMVSS No. 207 to small school buses with lap/shoulder belts to minimize
the possibility of the seats' failure by forces acting on them as a
result of vehicle impact.\11\ This decision disagreed with Blue Bird's
comment on the NPRM, in which Blue Bird recommended not applying FMVSS
No. 207 to small school buses. Blue Bird believed that FMVSS No. 207
was excessive because ``the required FMVSS 210 loading captures the
seat inertial loading at a deceleration level exceeding the 20g
required by FMVSS 207.''
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\11\ S1, Purpose and Scope, of FMVSS No. 207 states: ``This
standard establishes requirements for seats, their attachment
assemblies, and their installation to minimize the possibility of
their failure by forces acting on them as a result of vehicle
impact.''
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In the final rule, we discussed our reasons for concluding that
there was a safety need to apply FMVSS No. 207 to small school buses.
Among the reasons, we explained that the dynamic seat anchor loads
measured in NHTSA's sled testing of small school bus seating systems
(tests using a small school bus crash pulse with restrained test
dummies in the bench seat under evaluation, and belted and unbelted
test dummies in seats aft of the bench seat under evaluation) matched,
or replicated with a reasonable safety margin, the total load on the
seat from the combined FMVSS No. 207 and FMVSS No. 210 loads. In the
agency's analysis, we included the rear loading to school bus seats
from belted and unbelted occupants in the aft row.
Petition for Reconsideration--In its petition for reconsideration,
Blue Bird disagreed with the final rule's requirement to apply FMVSS
No. 207 loading to small school buses with lap/shoulder seat belt
assemblies. Blue Bird stated that the additional load is not necessary
if the loading from rear passengers is not taken into consideration,
and provided an analysis of the loading without contact from rear
passengers to the seat back.
Blue Bird stated that neither the NPRM nor the final rule mention
any intent to have small school bus passenger seats withstand the loads
resulting from contact by passengers seated behind them. Blue Bird
expressed the belief that its analysis shows FMVSS No. 210 loading of
small school bus passenger seats equipped with lap/shoulder seat belt
assemblies captures the seat's inertial loading defined by FMVSS No.
207 with room to spare. Therefore, in Blue Bird's view, applying FMVSS
No. 207's loading simultaneously is excessive. Blue Bird further argued
that if the loading resulting from contact by occupants rearward of the
seat is a concern, a separate rulemaking pertinent to that condition
should be initiated.
NHTSA's Response--We are denying this request. To justify its view
that FMVSS No. 210 alone was sufficient to ensure loading by the lap/
shoulder seat belt assemblies, Blue Bird presented an analysis in its
petition for reconsideration of the final rule similar to what Blue
Bird submitted as its comment to the NPRM. In the analysis in its
petition for reconsideration of the final rule, Blue Bird applied the
ratio of small to large school bus loading reported in the final rule
and assumed that there is no rear loading to school bus seats from
belted occupants in the rear row (or argued that such rear loading
should not be considered). It estimated the anchorage loads using the
measured belt loads and computed inertial loads for the seat under
consideration without including the rear loading from belted occupants
in the rear row.
We believe that Blue Bird's assertion that rear loading should be
excluded from consideration is incorrect. The agency's analysis used
the maximum loads measured directly at the seat attachment to the
vehicle (Table 3.1 in the Technical Analysis supporting the final rule,
see Docket No. NHTSA-2008-0163) and thus did not rely on a theoretical
summation of belt loads and inertial loads as Blue Bird's did. Our
analysis of the test data showed that the seat anchorage loads for a
given crash pulse and seat type depend on the number of occupants in
lap/shoulder belts, the occupants' size, and the contact from
passengers rearward of the seat.
The agency's sled testing of school bus seats used a small school
bus crash pulse and replicated a typical real world configuration of
seats with belted 50th percentile male dummies in one row of school bus
seats and both belted and unbelted 50th percentile male dummies in the
row directly rear of the seats under consideration. In all the tests
where there were belted or unbelted occupants in the row of seats to
the rear of the seating row where the attachment loads were measured,
the rear row occupants contacted the seats in front of them. The total
seat anchorage loads measured in these sled tests included the seat
back loading from the rear seat occupants. Therefore, the assertion
that the agency did not take these loads into consideration is not
correct. Blue Bird's analysis did not take into consideration all the
loads experienced by the seat during a crash event, since it does not
account for the loading of the seat from rear occupants.
Our analysis of the results of the sled testing showed that the
combined FMVSS Nos. 207 and 210 loading levels match the dynamic
loading level fairly closely for the seat configuration with two belted
50th percentile male occupants in the front and rear rows. This
analysis supports the fact that the FMVSS No. 207 load is not redundant
for small school buses and should be considered along with the FMVSS
No. 210 loads.
We do not agree with Blue Bird's view that the agency made ``no
mention of any intent to have small school bus passenger seats
withstand the loading resulting from contact by passengers seated
behind them'' in either the NPRM or final rule. The petitioner stated
that we did not provide notice that we would be considering loads from
rear passengers when we proposed to apply the FMVSS No. 207
requirements to
[[Page 66691]]
small school bus passenger seats. We disagree, as the purpose and scope
of FMVSS No. 207 is to minimize the possibility of the failure of the
seat's attachment to the vehicle as a result of forces during a vehicle
impact. As such, it would have been remiss of the agency not to have
considered all forces, including the forces on the seat from rear
occupants, particularly unbelted occupants striking the seat backs, in
its analysis.
Throughout the rulemaking, NHTSA discussed the importance it
attached to developing performance criteria that accounted for the
interaction between fore-and-aft passengers in school bus seats with
lap/shoulder belts. The quasi-static test adopted by the final rule for
testing school bus passenger seats with lap/shoulder belts was
expressly developed to recognize the interaction between fore-and-aft
passengers in bus seats. In the NPRM, NHTSA stated that the quasi-
static test requirement was proposed ``to test school bus seats with
lap/shoulder belts, to help ensure that seat backs incorporating lap/
shoulder belts are strong enough to withstand the forward pull of the
torso belts in a crash and the forces imposed on the seat from unbelted
passengers to the rear of the belted occupants.'' NPRM, 72 FR at 65514.
(See also final rule, 73 FR at 62766. The agency developed the quasi-
static test to ensure ``that seat backs incorporating lap/shoulder
belts are strong enough to withstand the forward pull of the torso
belts in a crash and the forces imposed on the seat from unbelted
passengers.'')
In the NPRM and final rule (73 FR at 62766), we also described the
sequence of events that the agency sought to replicate with the quasi-
static test. NHTSA observed this sequence in a sled test involving two
unbelted 50th percentile male dummies positioned behind a school bus
bench seat containing two restrained 50th percentile male dummies.
1. The knees of the unbelted dummy to the rear struck the back of
the forward seat, causing some seat back deflection.
2. The seat back was loaded by the shoulder belt of the restrained
dummy in the forward seat.
3. The shoulder belt load was reduced as the seat back to which it
was attached deflected forward.
4. The shoulder belt loads reduced to approximately zero when the
unbelted dummies' chests struck the forward seat back.
5. The forward seat back deflected further forward as the energy
from the unbelted dummies was absorbed.
With the emphasis NHTSA gave throughout the rulemaking to the
forces imparted on the seating system from passengers to the rear of
the belted occupant, the agency provided ample notice that it would be
considering the force generated by rear-seated occupants on a seating
system in determining whether FMVSS No. 207 should apply to school bus
seating systems.\12\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\12\ In the NPRM, while considering the need for the FMVSS No.
207 test requirements for school buses, the agency compared the seat
anchor loads in a dynamic sled test with belted occupants in the
subject seat and unbelted occupants in the rear with the seat anchor
loads generated in the proposed FMVSS Nos. 210, 207, and 222 quasi-
static load tests. See 72 FR 65518.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Considering the above, the agency provided notice that the load
from the rear seat passenger would be considered. For those reasons, we
will not revisit this issue with a separate rulemaking action to
include the load from those passengers. Blue Bird's petition for
reconsideration on the FMVSS No. 207 issue is thus denied.
c. Minimum Lateral Anchorage Separation
Final Rule--In the final rule, S5.1.7 of FMVSS No. 222 was amended
to require that each passenger seating position with a lap/shoulder
restraint system have a minimum seat belt lower anchor lateral spacing
of: 280 mm (11.0 in) for flexible occupancy seats with the maximum
number of occupants; and 330 mm (13 in) for flexible occupancy seats
with the minimum occupancy configuration and for seats with fixed
occupant capacity. Under FMVSS No. 210, movable (e.g., sliding)
anchorages for an occupant seating position cannot be capable of being
closer than 165 mm (6.5 in).
Petition for Reconsideration--In its petition for reconsideration,
M2K states that the final rule's minimum lateral anchorage spacing
requirement (280 mm for flexible occupancy seats with the maximum
number of occupants; and 330 mm for flexible occupancy seats with the
minimum occupancy configuration and for seats with fixed occupant
capacity) is substantially more restrictive of seat design than the
current FMVSS No. 210 requirement (S4.3.1.4), which specifies a minimum
lateral spacing of 165 mm (6.5 in). M2K stated that data do not exist
to demonstrate that the FMVSS No. 210 anchorage spacing is
insufficient. It believed that the minimum lateral anchorage spacing
should be the same distance as the hip breadth specified in the final
rule update of FMVSS No. 208, which specifies the following occupant
anthropometry in S7.1.4 of that standard: Hip breadth of 50th
percentile 6-year-old child = 213 mm (8.4 in); hip breadth of 50th
percentile 10-year-old child = 257 mm (10.1 in).
M2K asks that the minimum lateral anchorage spacing be equal to the
hip width of a 10-year-old (257 mm (10.1 in)) for all school bus
passenger seats regardless of whether the seats are designed for
``fixed'' or ``flexible'' occupancy seat configurations. Despite being
less than the 280 mm (11.0 in) requirement, M2K argued that the 257 mm
(10.1 in) value established more stringent design criteria for school
buses than the current FMVSS No. 210 requirement of 165 mm (6.5 in) for
passenger vehicles and light trucks. The petitioner stated its belief
that the 257 mm (10.1 in) value achieves NHTSA's stated goal of
increasing protection for child occupants by preventing compressive
loading of the iliac crests. M2K recommended that this recommendation
would not exclude any of the three current ``flex-seat'' designs
produced by IMMI, CE White, and M2K. M2K believed that the 257 mm (10.1
in) minimum spacing should apply to both fixed and laterally moveable
anchorages on lap/shoulder seat belts for flex-seats, as well as for
lap belts on fixed-capacity seats.
NHTSA's Response--We are denying this request. The agency specified
a minimum lateral anchorage spacing to provide better pelvic load
distribution for school bus passengers in frontal impacts. When
anchorages are narrower than the occupant pelvis, the lap belt can wrap
around the iliac crests and cause compressive loading. As discussed
below, a minimum lateral spacing of 257 mm (10.1 in) recommended by M2K
does not meet our objective of ensuring that excessive compressive
loads are not induced by the school bus seat belt anchorages; the
petitioner provided no information supporting its contrary view.
To determine the appropriate value for lateral anchorage separation
for the final rule, the agency measured the lower anchorage spacing of
several school bus seats with flexible and fixed occupancy. We
determined that flexible occupancy seat designs in maximum occupancy
configuration are able to achieve a lateral separation of the lower
anchorages of no less than 280 mm (11.0 in) simultaneously in any
seating position. This minimum lateral spacing of the lower anchorages
specified in the final rule for flex-seats in its maximum occupancy
configuration is slightly larger than the hip breadth of a typical 10-
year-old child (257 mm or 10.1 in) and provides better pelvic load
distribution than the 257 mm (10.1 in) lateral anchorage spacing. The
257 mm (10.1 in) lateral anchorage spacing
[[Page 66692]]
recommended by M2K will be insufficient for occupants larger than an
average 10-year-old, such as a 95th percentile 10-year-old with a hip
breadth of 275 mm (10.8 in \13\). Further, reducing the anchorage
spacing to 257 mm (10.1 in) as recommended by the petitioner would not
gain additional seating positions for typical school bus seats. M2K
provided no data or support for its assertion that a 257 mm (10.1 in)
minimum lateral anchorage spacing requirement would prevent compressive
loading of the iliac crests.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\13\ Snyder et al., ``Anthropometry of infants, children and
youth to age 18 for product safety design.'' University of Michigan
report UM-HSRI-77-17, 1977, http://mreed.umtri.umich.edu/mreed/downloads/anthro/child/Snyder_1977_Child.pdf.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The 330 mm (13 in) minimum lateral lower anchor spacing specified
in the final rule for flexible occupancy seats with the minimum
occupancy configuration and for seats with fixed occupant capacity were
based on our measurements of typical school bus seats. The 330 mm (13
in) lower anchor spacing is practicable and corresponds to the hip
width of 5th percentile female and results in no loss in occupancy for
typical school bus seat widths of 762, 991, and 1,143 mm (30, 39, and
45 in). In addition, we believe the 330 mm (13 in) minimum lateral
anchor spacing will result in good load distribution on the pelvis for
adult size occupants while the 257 mm (10.1 in) lateral anchor spacing
recommended by the petitioner may result in excessive compressive loads
on the pelvis.
We also note that M2K appears to believe that the minimum anchorage
spacing does not apply to sliding anchorages.\14\ That understanding is
not correct. In determining the minimum width for sliding anchorages,
we will assess the minimum anchorage separation simultaneously
achievable by the anchorages. That is, a sliding anchorage may increase
the anchorage separation for one position while decreasing the
separation for the other seating position. However, the configuration
that results in the reduced anchorage separation must meet the
specified minimum anchorage spacing requirement of 280 mm (11.0 in)
simultaneously for all positions.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\14\ This was based on our reading of M2K's petition, which was
in a sparsely-worded bullet format. One bullet states: ``Spacing
requirement only applies to fixed-anchorage seat belts, not sliding
anchorages.'' (Emphasis in text.) No further discussion was provided
by the petitioner.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
d. Clarifications of Torso Anchorage Location
Final Rule--NHTSA adopted requirements for the height of the torso
belt anchorage to address the comfort of the torso (shoulder) belt and
to ensure that the torso belt anchorage is not below the shoulder,
which could result in compressive loads on the occupant's spine in a
frontal crash. The final rule amended FMVSS No. 210 to require that the
torso belt anchor point (where the torso belt first contacts the
uppermost torso belt anchorage) be fixed or adjustable to at least 400
mm (15.7 in) above the SgRP for a small occupant seating position of a
flexible occupancy seat or at least 520 mm (20.5 in) above the SgRP for
all other seating positions. (S4.1.3.2(a), FMVSS No. 210.)
The final rule also required that the height of the torso belt be
adjustable from the torso belt anchor point to within at least 280 mm
(11 in) vertically above the seating reference point SgRP. Id. The
height of the torso belt, as adjusted, is measured by determining the
``school bus torso belt adjusted height'' as the term is defined in S3
of FMVSS No. 210. ``School bus torso belt adjusted height'' was added
to FMVSS No. 210 to provide an objective means of determining the
height position of the adjusted torso belt. ``School bus torso belt
adjusted height'' is defined in S3 as: the vertical height above the
SgRP of the point at which the torso belt deviates more than 10 degrees
from the horizontal plane when the torso belt is pulled away from the
seat by a 20 N (4.5 lb) force at a location on the webbing
approximately 100 mm (3.94 in) from the adjustment device and the
pulled portion of the webbing is held in a horizontal plane.
Petition for Reconsideration--In its petition for reconsideration,
Blue Bird asked NHTSA to clarify the definition of ``school bus torso
belt adjusted height,'' particularly with respect to the phrase
``deviates more than 10 degrees from the horizontal plane.'' Blue Bird
stated that it is not possible to pull the webbing in a horizontal
plane and maintain the original point of belt contact because the arc
of the belt forces load the application device downward since the lower
anchor point is fixed.
NHTSA's Response--The request is granted. We are clarifying the
definition of ``school bus torso belt adjusted height'' and adding a
new Figure 5 in FMVSS No. 210 to set forth in a clearer, more detailed
manner how the torso belt adjusted height measurement will be made. The
revised definition removes the confusing phrase ``deviates more than 10
degrees from the horizontal plane'' and adds a new figure to indicate
that the measurement is made to a horizontal segment of the torso belt
that is located between 25 mm to 75 mm (1 in to 3 in) forward of the
adjustment device while applying a horizontal 20 N (4.5 lb) force to
the belt in the forward direction. The 20 N (4.5 lb) horizontal force
is applied in the forward direction through the webbing at a location
greater than 100 mm (3.94 in) forward of the adjustment device (as
shown in the new Figure 5) after the retractor has been locked. Figure
5 also illustrates that slack should remain in the portion of the belt
between its bottom anchorage and the point of force application. This
slack allows the upper portion of the torso belt, between the point of
force application and the adjuster, to be pulled in a horizontal plane.
We believe these amendments address the petitioner's concerns.
e. Integration of the Seat Belt Anchorages Into the Seat Structure
Final Rule--The final rule specified that with the exception of the
last row of seats, seat belt anchorages, both torso and lap, are
required to be integrated into the seat structure. This requirement was
established to prevent the incorporation of seat belt anchorages at
locations that could result in belts potentially injuring unbelted
school bus passengers in a crash or obstructing emergency egress.
In the final rule, based on comments received on this issue, we
excluded the last row of seats from the requirement because we
concurred that the risk of injury or obstruction is lessened for this
row of seats. The last row of seats in conventional large and small
school buses typically has two seats with a 610 mm (24 in) aisle (large
buses) or 559 mm (22 in) aisle (small buses) between them, to provide
access to the rear emergency exit door. FMVSS No. 217 imposes
requirements for unobstructed passage through the door. Thus, at least
in the immediate vicinity of the door, we determined that FMVSS No. 217
would prevent seat belts from being installed in such a way that could
impede access to the emergency exit.\15\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\15\ The requirement for a large school bus emergency exit door
opening is found in 49 CFR 571.217 S5.4.2.1(a)(1).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Petition for Reconsideration--In its petition for reconsideration,
Blue Bird suggested that some ``last row'' seats should not be excluded
from the requirement that the belts be integrated into the seat
structure. The petitioner stated that some customers order buses with
seat plans that have a wheelchair position located behind the rearmost
passenger seat. In other cases, the rearmost passenger seat is forward
enough that a side emergency door would be rearward of it. Blue Bird
stated that in those cases, the rearmost passenger seat should have its
seat belt
[[Page 66693]]
assembly anchorages attached to the seat structure to help prevent a
trip hazard.
NHTSA's Response--We have granted this aspect of the petition. We
agree with the petitioner that seats with a wheelchair position or an
emergency exit behind them should be required to have the seat belt
anchorages integrated into the seat structure to help assure that the
belts do not present a safety hazard for unrestrained passengers or
during emergency evacuation, i.e., to reduce the risk of tripping,
entanglement or injury. We have revised S4.1.3.1 to make the exclusion
narrower and clearer.
The final rule was ambiguous as to whether school bus seats that
had a wheelchair position behind it comprised the last row of the
school bus. Today's amendment makes S4.1.3.1 clear that seats in such a
row are not excluded from the requirement for integral seat belts.
f. Seat Cushion Latches
Final Rule--The final rule amended S5.1.5 of FMVSS No. 222 to
require latching devices for school bus seats that have latches that
allow them to flip up or be removed for easy cleaning. We also
established a test procedure that would require the latch to activate
when a 22 kg (48.4 lb) mass is placed on top of the seat at the seat
cushion's center. The 22 kg (48.4 lb) mass is representative of the
weight of an average 6-year-old child. The test procedure is to ensure
that an unlatched seat cushion will latch when an average 6-year-old
child sits on the seat.
Petitions for Reconsideration--Marietta City School District (MCSD)
of Ohio stated its belief that the requirement for self-latching seat
cushions should be rescinded because the petitioner stated it presents
a safety hazard or an ``accident waiting to happen.'' MCSD suggested
that students will quickly learn to unlatch the seats and push them out
of place, place obstructive items in the latch area, or unlatch them as
a prank.
M2K requested clarification of the test procedure for the seat
cushion self-latching requirement specified in S5.1.5(a). It asked
about the loading rate used to apply the 22 kg (48.4 lb) mass to the
seat cushion, where on the seat cushion must the 22 kg (48.4 lb) mass
be applied, and whether the 22 kg (48.4 lb) mass is a distributed load
across the surface of the cushion or limited to a small percentage of
the cushion area. Assuming the final rule is intended to ensure a
child's weight alone will engage the latch mechanism, M2K suggested
that a 213 mm x 305 mm (8.5 in x 12.2 in) rigid plate be used to
``simulate the shape of a single 6-year-old'' child, and that the
agency should ballast the plate to ensure an evenly-distributed 22 kg
(48.4 lb) mass. The petitioner suggested that the plate should be
oriented longitudinally above the centerline of the seat and then
dropped horizontally onto the seat cushion from a height of 250 mm
(9.84 in). The petitioner further suggested that ``NHTSA recommend the
cushion latch mechanism make a distinct sound, similar to the `click'
of a seat belt latching, when engaged.'' \16\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\16\ M2K also recommended clarification of the test procedure
for S5.1.5(b) of the seat cushion retention test. It stated that the
method for testing the seat cushion is unclear and suggested
clarification to the test procedure to allow, among other things,
the load to be uniformly distributed across as much of the underside
of the seat cushion as is practicable. M2K's suggestions are outside
the scope of this rulemaking because changes to that test were not
proposed in the NPRM. The procedure for performing the retention
test has been in effect for over 30 years and school bus
manufacturers are familiar with how the test is performed. The
agency's compliance test procedure for the seat bottom cushion
retention and self-latching tests are available on NHTSA's Web site
at: http://www.nhtsa.dot.gov/staticfiles/DOT/NHTSA/Vehicle%20Safety/Test%20Procedures/Associated%20Files/TP222-04.pdf. The compliance
test procedure for seat bottom cushion retention uses a force
distribution pad of 102 mm radius between the load fixture and the
cushion with a calibrated load cell between the seat cushion and
load applicator. If it is not possible to use the distribution pad
with 102 mm radius, a rectangular distribution pad of at least the
same area is used to apply force to the seat cushion. An upward
force equal to 5 times the weight of the seat cushion is applied in
not less than 1 second or more than 5 seconds and maintained for 5
seconds.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In its petition for reconsideration, Blue Bird believed that the
test load should be changed from ``22 kg (48.4 pound)'' to ``23.6 kg
(52 pound).'' Blue Bird argued that no justification was provided for
the 22 kg (48 lb) weight and the final rule (73 FR at 62760) stated
that the Hybrid III 6-year-old child dummy weighed 52 lb (23.6 kg), so
the test weight should be consistent with the Hybrid III 6-year-old
dummy used in FMVSS No. 213, Child Restraint Systems.
NHTSA's Response--We are denying the petitions except for a few of
the requests of M2K. We start by noting that this rulemaking does not
require that seat bottom cushions be designed to flip-up without the
use of tools. However, such seat cushion designs are popular with many
school systems and are widely available in school buses purchased
today. MCSD may have misunderstood the final rule in this regard.
We disagree with MCSD that requiring self-latching mechanism on
seats designed to flip-up without the use of tools will result in a
safety hazard. The agency proposed and implemented the requirement in
the final rule because current seats can be left unlatched and, in the
event of a rollover crash, the seat frames could become exposed and the
bottoms could detach and become projectiles. The self-latching
provision established in the final rule ensures that those flip-up
seats have a self latching mechanism, and thus promotes safety. The
requirement implements a National Transportation Safety Board
Recommendation to NHTSA (H-84-75).
To address M2K's suggestions about clarifying the test procedure
for the self-latching seat requirement, this final rule makes minor
revisions to the regulatory text so that the same tools and procedures
can be used for the self latching test as those used for the seat
retention test. We are changing the language to indicate a downward
force, in Newtons (N), equivalent to the gravitational force exerted by
a 22 kg mass (22 kg x 9.81 m/s\2\ = 216 N (48.4 lb)) that is currently
specified to be placed on top of the center of the seat cushion be
applied within 1 to 5 seconds and maintained for 5 seconds.\17\ We are
also adding language clarifying that activation of the self-latching
mechanism is assessed using the seat cushion retention test procedure
and requirement.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\17\ Some manufacturers suggested that the 22 kg mass be dropped
from a specified height. We decline this suggestion because applying
the force within 1 to 5 seconds is a simple and practical method of
load application and is similar to the force application in the seat
retention test.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
We disagree with M2K's suggestion that the agency recommend that
seat latch mechanisms make a distinct sound, similar to the ``click''
of seat belt latching, when engaged. We have no requirements in FMVSS
No. 209, ``Seat belt assemblies,'' requiring that the seat belt
latching mechanism make an audible ``click'' sound when engaged.
However, manufacturers have voluntarily included this feature for seat
belt systems. We are not persuaded that requiring or recommending that
the seat cushion self-latching mechanism make an audible sound when
engaged is necessary. Manufacturers may include such features if there
is a consumer demand for it.
We disagree with Blue Bird's statement that no justification was
provided for the 22 kg (48.4 lb) weight and with Blue Bird's suggestion
that the test load be changed from ``22 kg (48.4 pounds)'' to ``23.6 kg
(52 pounds)'' to be consistent with the Hybrid III 6-year-old dummy in
FMVSS No. 213. The NPRM and the final rule both indicated that the 22
kg (48.4 lb) mass was used to simulate the weight of an average 6-
[[Page 66694]]
year-old child.18 19 In the October 21, 2008 final rule, at
S7.1.4 of FMVSS No. 208, we included anthropometric data to indicate
that the weight of a 50th-percentile 6-year-old child is 21.4 kg (47.3
lb). Thus, the agency used a 22 kg (48.4 lb) mass in the test and
sufficient reasoning was provided in the NPRM and final rule.
Furthermore, we are unconvinced that it is more desirable for the
weight used in the test to match the weight of the Hybrid III 6-year-
old dummy rather than the weight of an average 6-year-old child.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\18\ 72 FR 65515, school bus NPRM.
\19\ 73 FR 62756, school bus final rule.
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IV. Comments on Decisions Not Involving Regulatory Text
a. Requiring Large School Buses To Have Seat Belts
Final rule--In the final rule, we specified performance
requirements for voluntarily-installed lap and lap/shoulder belts in
large school buses to ensure both the strength of the anchorages and
the compatibility of the seat with compartmentalization. We could not
find a safety need to require passenger seat belt systems on large
school buses to supplement the protection provided by
compartmentalization.
Post Final Rule Comments--In a document styled as a petition for
reconsideration, Public Citizen (PC) objected to the final rule's not
requiring lap/shoulder passenger seat belts in new large school
buses.\20\ PC made several comments related to this issue.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\20\ The NPRM did not propose to require passenger seat belts on
large school buses. The NPRM discussed NHTSA's reasons for deciding
not to propose passenger seat belts on large school buses.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
1. PC asked the agency to revise its analysis of the potential
benefits of lap/shoulder belts on large buses ``to include updated
analysis of multiple crash modes including side-impact and rollover. *
* *'' PC stated that NHTSA ``must provide a more credible explanation
of its determination of restraint performance in these other crash
modes than the correlation to passenger cars.''
2. PC objected to the following NPRM statement regarding NHTSA's
best practices: ``If ample funds were available for pupil
transportation, and pupil transportation providers could order and
purchase a sufficient number of school buses needed to provide school
bus transportation to all children, pupil transportation providers
should consider installing lap/shoulder belts on large school buses.''
The petitioner stated that this ``undermines the safest option for
children on these buses rather than either refusing or encouraging lap/
shoulder belt installation.''
3. PC stated that it agrees with the National Transportation Safety
Board (NTSB) comment that lap-only belts should not be permitted. PC
stated that in 1999 the NTSB suggested there may be potential for
greater injuries in occupants restrained using lap-only belts in side
crashes. Further, PC stated that we have not discussed how raising the
seat back height affects the performance of lap-only belts.
4. PC stated that NHTSA ``does not discuss the effect of `economies
of scale' in reducing the incremental cost of adding belts to the buses
* * *. Economies of scale and learning by doing can significantly
reduce costs, but NHTSA's economic analyses makes no mention of these
effects.''
NHTSA's Response--The important public policy issue of whether to
require the installation of seat belts for school bus passengers is
before the agency in petitions for rulemaking submitted by the Center
for Auto Safety, PC and a wide variety of school bus safety and medical
organizations and associations. The agency will consider PC's comments
in responding to those petitions.
b. Defining a ``Small'' School Bus
Final Rule--In the final rule, NHTSA declined the suggestions of
some commenters to raise the gross vehicle weight rating (GVWR)
delineation between ``small'' and ``large'' school buses from 4,536 kg
(10,000 lb) to 6,576 kg (14,500 lb).\21\ The agency believed that the
suggestion was beyond the scope of the rulemaking.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\21\ Commenters sought to subject ``Type A-2'' school buses,
which have a GVWR that can range up to 6,576 kg (14,500 pounds), to
the requirements for small school buses.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In administering NHTSA's school bus safety standards, the agency
has historically used GVWR to determine the applicability of the FMVSS
requirements and has historically used a GVWR of 4,536 kg (10,000 lb)
to classify school buses. ``Small'' school buses (GVWR of 4,536 kg
(10,000 lb) or less) have been required to have passenger seat belts
while large school buses (GVWR above 4,536 kg (10,000 lb)) have not.
The NPRM presented the agency's crash and sled test data relating to
small and large school buses and discussed different views on the
merits of having seat belts on small and large school buses. Nowhere in
the NPRM was there a discussion about reclassifying some large school
buses as small school buses or raising the 4,536 kg (10,000 lb) GVWR
delineation. Nowhere in the NPRM was it proposed to require passenger
seat belt systems in buses that are not currently required to have
passenger seat belts, nor was it suggested that those buses should be
subject to the other school bus safety standards applicable to small
school buses.
Because the NPRM did not discuss the possibility of requiring
passenger belt systems in buses between 4,536 kg (10,000 lb) and 6,576
kg (14,500 lb), NHTSA believed that raising the GVWR delineation to
6,576 kg (14,500 lb) and thus subjecting school buses with a GVWR
between 4,536 kg (10,000 lb) and 6,576 kg (14,500 lb) to a new set of
FMVSS requirements would be beyond the scope of the rulemaking. The
agency thus declined to raise the GVWR cut-off in the final rule. We
noted that the suggested change in that GVWR limit would not be
trivial. Expanding the small school bus category as suggested would
have resulted in a substantial increase in the fleet percentage of
small school buses, from 7.2 to as much as 24 percent. 73 FR at 62757.
Post Final Rule Comments--In a document styled as a petition for
reconsideration, CEW objected to the agency's decision not to increase
the GVWR delineation to 6,576 kg (14,500 lb). CEW did not agree that
the matter was beyond the scope of this rulemaking. CEW argued that it
considers Type A-2 school buses \22\ to be ``part and parcel'' of the
intent of the final rule and the agency should make determinations such
as whether Type A-2 school buses are more similar to small school buses
than large school buses. CEW stated that it is not clear why the agency
stated that requiring Type A-2 school buses would raise the percent of
school buses that would be required to have seat belts from 7.2 percent
to 24 percent and it should have no bearing on whether Type A-2 school
buses should have seat belts. CEW stated that the impact of requiring
seat belts on Type A-2 school buses should not be material to making a
determination for ensuring the safety of school bus passengers.
Similarly, in its petition for reconsideration, IC supported increasing
the GVWR delineation between small and large school buses. IC stated
that there are structural differences between school buses with a GVWR
greater than 6,576 kg (16,000 lb) as compared to those with
[[Page 66695]]
a GVWR less than or equal to 6,576 kg (16,000 lb).\23\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\22\ Type A-2 school buses are large school buses with a GVWR
between 4,536 kg (10,000 pounds) and 6,576 kg (14,500 pounds). These
school buses have never been required to have passenger seat belts.
\23\ IC stated in its petition: ``School buses with a GVWR of
less than 16,000 lbs. are most often based on a passenger or light
truck vehicle. School buses with a GVWR greater than 16,000 lbs. are
most often an integrated vehicle designed specifically for that
application and components and systems are usually similar to medium
and heavy duty trucks.''
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
NHTSA's Response--We stand by our determination that raising the
GVWR delineation between small and large school buses to 6,576 kg
(14,500 lb) was beyond the scope of the rulemaking, i.e., that adequate
notice and an opportunity to comment on raising the GVWR cut-off was
not provided by the NPRM. In the NPRM, the agency discussed upgrading
the FMVSS No. 222 requirements for small (GVWR 4,536 kg (10,000 lb) or
less) school buses, from the current requirement for passenger lap
belts to an upgraded requirement for lap/shoulder belts and to raise
seat back height. The agency also discussed upgrading the requirement
for large (GVWR greater than 4,536 kg (10,000 lb)) school buses,
setting performance standards for voluntarily-installed passenger seat
belts and raising the seat back height. Type A-2 school buses (GVWR
between 4,536 kg (10,000 lb) and 6,576 kg (14,500 lb) are considered
``large'' school buses and have never been required to have passenger
seat belt systems. In the NPRM, we did not broach the issue of
requiring some large school buses to have lap/shoulder belts. Newly
requiring seat belts on these school buses would have been a
significant departure from current requirements and an issue of which
the public should have been informed. Likewise, the agency would have
benefited from public comment on the issue to ensure that impacts on
affected parties (e.g., school bus manufacturers, purchasers, and
users) were all well considered.
The CEW's comment regarding requiring the installation of seat
belts for passengers on larger school buses is before the agency in
petitions for rulemaking submitted by the Center for Auto Safety, PC,
and other organizations and associations. The agency will consider PC's
comments in responding to those petitions.
c. Preemption
Final Rule--In the October 2008 final rule, NHTSA responded to the
requirements of Executive Order (E.O.) 13132 (Federalism) in part by
examining whether there might be any possible basis for a judicial
finding of implied preemption of State tort law. NHTSA discussed the
2000 Supreme Court case, Geier v. American Honda Motor Co., 529 U.S.
861, and explained that when a State requirement stands as an obstacle
to the accomplishment and execution of a NHTSA safety standard, the
Supremacy Clause of the Constitution makes the State requirement
unenforceable. The agency did not express or suggest any intent to
preempt State tort law impliedly in the final rule. We stated: ``NHTSA
has not discerned any potential State requirements that might conflict
with the final rule * * *. We cannot completely rule out the
possibility that such a conflict might become apparent in the future
through subsequent experience with the standard.'' 73 FR at 62778.
Comment--In a document styled as a petition for
reconsideration,\24\ AAJ objected to NHTSA's discussion in the October
2008 final rule of Geier v. American Honda Motor Co., and the agency's
stating that there was the possibility that a conflict might become
apparent in the future between a State requirement and the FMVSS. PC
stated that the agency ``must remove harmful language suggesting that
the agency's minimum standards imply preemption of state tort law.''
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\24\ The agency does not consider this to be a petition for
reconsideration, as NHTSA's preemption discussion was not a rule.
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NHTSA's Response--We believe that a fundamental misunderstanding
lies at the heart of petitioners' characterization of the discussion in
the final rule. AAJ has mistakenly characterized the agency's
discussion of implied preemption, a discussion that we included in
approximately two dozen other Federal motor vehicle safety standard
rulemaking notices issued from February 2007 to November 2008. We
explained those discussions at length in a June 14, 2010 final rule on
FMVSS No. 305 (75 FR 33515, at 33524-33525), which we believe has
addressed the concerns of AAJ and PC on this subject.
To summarize the agency's discussion in the FMVSS No. 305 final
rule, in each of the Federal Register notices discussing Geier and the
agency's response to E.O. 13132, NHTSA sought to explain that we had
examined whether there might be any possible basis for a judicial
finding of implied preemption of state tort law. In all but a few of
those notices, we concluded each examination without identifying any
potential obstacle or conflict that might give rise to such a
finding.\25\ The FMVSS No. 305 final rule explained that the agency has
increasingly clarified and amplified its discussion responding to E.O.
13132 in an attempt to end the misunderstandings and assuage concerns
about the preemption discussion. Readers are referred to that document
for a full discussion of the language in question. Similarly, NHTSA has
clarified the discussion of E.O. 13132 found in today's document to
make it consistent with the FMVSS No. 305 discussion. The agency's
discussion in that document and the clarified language in this final
rule should eliminate commenters' misunderstandings about this topic.
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\25\ The October 2008 final rule on FMVSS No. 222 was one of
many notices in which we did not identify any potential obstacle or
conflict.
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V. Rulemaking Analyses and Notices
Executive Order 12866 and DOT Regulatory Policies and Procedures
This rulemaking document was not reviewed by the Office of
Management and Budget under E.O. 12866 and is not considered to be
significant under E.O. 12866 or the Department's Regulatory Policies
and Procedures (44 FR 11034; February 26, 1979). NHTSA prepared a final
regulatory evaluation (FRE) for the October 21, 2008 final rule.\26\
Today's document makes slight changes to the regulatory text of the
October 2008 final rule to clarify the rule.
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\26\ NHTSA's FRE for the October 21, 2008 final rule discusses
issues relating to the rule's potential costs, benefits and other
impacts. The FRE is available at Docket No. NHTSA-2008-0163 and may
also be obtained by contacting http://www.regulations.gov or by
contacting DOT's Docket Management Facility, M-30, U.S. Department
of Transportation, West Building, Ground Floor, Rm. W12-140, 1200
New Jersey Avenue, SE., Washington, DC 20590, telephone 202-366-
9324.
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Today's document makes clearer the procedure specifying how we will
measure the height of school bus passenger torso belts, and clarifies
that a requirement that seat belts be integral to the passenger seat (a
requirement adopted to reduce the likelihood of passengers getting
injured by or tangled in loose belts) also applies to seats that have
wheelchair positions or side emergency doors behind them, even if the
seats are in the last row of vehicles. We have also slightly revised
the test procedure for testing the self-latching requirement for school
bus seat cushions, to specify the weight that is placed on the seat
cushion in Newtons, and to specify that the downward force is applied
in a one to 5 second timeframe. The changes in today's final rule do
not affect the determinations of the FRE prepared for the October 21,
2008 final rule.
Regulatory Flexibility Act
Pursuant to the Regulatory Flexibility Act (5 U.S.C. 601 et seq.,
as amended by the Small Business Regulatory
[[Page 66696]]
Enforcement Fairness Act (SBREFA) of 1996), whenever an agency is
required to publish a notice of proposed rulemaking or final rule, it
must prepare and make available for public comment a regulatory
flexibility analysis that describes the effect of the rule on small
entities (i.e., small businesses, small organizations, and small
governmental jurisdictions). The Small Business Administration's
regulations at 13 CFR Part 121 define a small business, in part, as a
business entity ``which operates primarily within the United States.''
(13 CFR 121.105(a)). No regulatory flexibility analysis is required if
the head of an agency certifies that the rule will not have a
significant economic impact on a substantial number of small entities.
The SBREFA amended the Regulatory Flexibility Act to require Federal
agencies to provide a statement of the factual basis for certifying
that a rule will not have a significant economic impact on a
substantial number of small entities.
NHTSA has considered the effects of this rulemaking action under
the Regulatory Flexibility Act. According to 13 CFR 121.201, the Small
Business Administration's size standards regulations used to define
small business concerns, school bus manufacturers would fall under
North American Industry Classification System (NAICS) No. 336111,
Automobile Manufacturing, which has a size standard of 1,000 employees
or fewer. Using the size standard of 1,000 employees or fewer, NHTSA
estimates that there are two small school bus manufacturers in the
United States (Trans Tech and Van-Con). NHTSA believes that both Trans
Tech and Van-Con manufacture small school buses and large school buses.
I hereby certify that this final rule will not have a significant
economic impact on a substantial number of small entities. In this
final rule, we simply clarify requirements in FMVSS No. 210 and clarify
test procedures in FMVSS No. 222. These clarifications will impose no
costs on small businesses beyond those described in the Regulatory
Flexibility Act section of the final rule of October 21, 2008 (see 73
FR at 62777).
Executive Order 13132
NHTSA has examined today's final rule pursuant to Executive Order
13132 (64 FR 43255; Aug. 10, 1999) and concluded that no additional
consultation with States, local governments, or their representatives
is mandated beyond the rulemaking process. The agency has concluded
that the rule does not have sufficient federalism implications to
warrant consultation with State and local officials or the preparation
of a federalism summary impact statement. The final rule does not have
``substantial direct effects on the States, on the relationship between
the national government and the States, or on the distribution of power
and responsibilities among the various levels of government.''
NHTSA rules can have preemptive effect in two ways. First, the
National Traffic and Motor Vehicle Safety Act contains an express
preemption provision:
When a motor vehicle safety standard is in effect under this
chapter, a State or a political subdivision of a State may prescribe
or continue in effect a standard applicable to the same aspect of
performance of a motor vehicle or motor vehicle equipment only if
the standard is identical to the standard prescribed under this
chapter.
49 U.S.C. 30103(b)(1). It is this statutory command that preempts any
non-identical State legislative and administrative law \27\ addressing
the same aspect of performance.
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\27\ The issue of potential preemption of state tort law is
addressed in the immediately following paragraph discussing implied
preemption.
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Second, the Supreme Court has recognized the possibility, in some
instances, of implied preemption of State requirements imposed on motor
vehicle manufacturers, including sanctions imposed by State tort law.
That possibility is dependent upon there being an actual conflict
between a FMVSS and the State requirement. If and when such a conflict
exists, the Supremacy Clause of the Constitution makes the State
requirements unenforceable. See Geier v. American Honda Motor Co., 529
U.S. 861 (2000), finding implied preemption of state tort law on the
basis of a conflict discerned by the court,\28\ not on the basis of an
intent to preempt asserted by the agency itself.\29\
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\28\ The conflict was discerned based upon the nature (e.g., the
language and structure of the regulatory text) and the safety-
related objectives of FMVSS requirements in question and the impact
of the State requirements on those objectives.
\29\ Indeed, in the rulemaking that established the rule at
issue in Geier, the agency did not assert preemption.
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NHTSA has considered the nature (e.g., the language and structure
of the regulatory text) and objectives of today's final rule and does
not discern any existing State requirements that conflict with the
final rule or the potential for any future State requirements that
might conflict with it. Without any conflict, there could not be any
implied preemption of state law, including state tort law.
National Environmental Policy Act
NHTSA has analyzed this final rule for the purposes of the National
Environmental Policy Act. The agency has determined that implementation
of this action would not have any significant impact on the quality of
the human environment.
Paperwork Reduction Act
Under the procedures established by the Paperwork Reduction Act of
1995, a person is not required to respond to a collection of
information by a Federal agency unless the collection displays a valid
OMB control number. Today's final rule does not establish any new
information collection requirements.
National Technology Transfer and Advancement Act
Under the National Technology Transfer and Advancement Act of 1995
(NTTAA) (Pub. L. 104-113), ``all Federal agencies and departments shall
use technical standards that are developed or adopted by voluntary
consensus standards bodies, using such technical standards as a means
to carry out policy objectives or activities determined by the agencies
and departments.'' OMB Circular A-119 ``Federal Participation in the
Development and Use of Voluntary Consensus Standards and in Conformity
Assessment Activities'' (February 10, 1998) establishes policies to
implement the NTAA throughout Federal executive agencies. In Section
4.a. of OMB Circular A-119, ``voluntary consensus standards'' are
defined as standards developed or adopted by voluntary consensus
standards bodies, both domestic and international. After carefully
reviewing the available information, NHTSA has determined that there
are no voluntary consensus standards relevant to this rulemaking.
Executive Order 12988
With respect to the review of the promulgation of a new regulation,
section 3(b) of Executive Order 12988, ``Civil Justice Reform'' (61 FR
4729, February 7, 1996) requires that Executive agencies make every
reasonable effort to ensure that the regulation: (1) Clearly specifies
the preemptive effect; (2) clearly specifies the effect on existing
Federal law or regulation; (3) provides a clear legal standard for
affected conduct, while promoting simplification and burden reduction;
(4) clearly specifies the retroactive effect, if any; (5) adequately
defines key terms; and (6) addresses other important issues affecting
clarity and general draftsmanship under any guidelines issued by the
Attorney General. This document is consistent
[[Page 66697]]
with that requirement. The preemptive effect of this final rule has
been discussed above. NHTSA notes further that there is no requirement
that individuals submit a petition for reconsideration or pursue other
administrative proceeding before they may file suit in court.
Unfunded Mandates Reform Act
The Unfunded Mandates Reform Act of 1995 requires agencies to
prepare a written assessment of the costs, benefits and other effects
of proposed or final rules that include a Federal mandate likely to
result in the expenditure by State, local or tribal governments, in the
aggregate, or by the private sector, of more than $100 million annually
(adjusted for inflation with base year of 1995). This final rule will
not result in expenditures by State, local or tribal governments, in
the aggregate, or by the private sector in excess of $100 million
annually.
Executive Order 13045
Executive Order 13045 (62 FR 19885, April 23, 1997) applies to any
rule that: (1) Is determined to be ``economically significant'' as
defined under E.O. 12866, and (2) concerns an environmental, health, or
safety risk that NHTSA has reason to believe may have a
disproportionate effect on children. This rulemaking is not subject to
the Executive Order because it is not economically significant as
defined in E.O. 12866.
Executive Order 13211
Executive Order 13211 (66 FR 28355, May 18, 2001) applies to any
rulemaking that: (1) Is determined to be economically significant as
defined under E.O. 12866, and is likely to have a significantly adverse
effect on the supply of, distribution of, or use of energy; or (2) that
is designated by the Administrator of the Office of Information and
Regulatory Affairs as a significant energy action. This rulemaking is
not subject to E.O. 13211.
Regulation Identifier Number (RIN)
The Department of Transportation assigns a regulation identifier
number (RIN) to each regulatory action listed in the Unified Agenda of
Federal Regulations. The Regulatory Information Service Center
publishes the Unified Agenda in April and October of each year. You may
use the RIN contained in the heading at the beginning of this document
to find this action in the Unified Agenda.
Privacy Act
Anyone is able to search the electronic form of all comments
received into any of our dockets by the name of the individual
submitting the comment (or signing the comment, if submitted on behalf
of an association, business, labor union, etc.). You may review DOT's
complete Privacy Act Statement in the Federal Register published on
April 11, 2000 (Volume 65, Number 70; Pages 19477-78).
List of Subjects in 49 CFR Part 571
Imports, Motor vehicle safety, Motor vehicles, and Tires.
0
In consideration of the foregoing, NHTSA amends 49 CFR Part 571 as set
forth below.
PART 571--FEDERAL MOTOR VEHICLE SAFETY STANDARDS
0
1. The authority citation for Part 571 continues to read as follows:
Authority: 49 U.S.C. 322, 30111, 30115, 30117 and 30166;
delegation of authority at 49 CFR 1.50.
0
2. Section 571.210 is amended by revising in S3, the definition for
``school bus torso belt adjusted height''; revising S4.1.3.1; revising
S4.1.3.2(a); and by adding Figure 5 at the end of the section, to read
as follows:
Sec. 571.210 Standard No. 210; Seat belt assembly anchorages.
* * * * *
S3. Definitions.
School bus torso belt adjusted height means the vertical height
above the seating reference point (SgRP) of the horizontal plane
containing a segment of the torso belt centerline located 25 mm to 75
mm forward of the torso belt height adjuster device, when the torso
belt retractor is locked and the torso belt is pulled away from the
seat back by applying a 20 N horizontal force in the forward direction
through the webbing at a location 100 mm or more forward of the
adjustment device as shown in Figure 5.
* * * * *
S4.1.3 School bus passenger seats.
S4.1.3.1 For school buses manufactured on or after October 21,
2011, seat belt anchorages for school bus passenger seats must be
attached to the school bus seat structure, including seats with
wheelchair positions or side emergency doors behind them. Seats with no
other seats behind them, no wheelchair positions behind them and no
side emergency door behind them are excluded from the requirement that
the seat belt anchorages must be attached to the school bus seat
structure. For school buses with a GVWR less than or equal to 4,536 kg
(10,000 pounds), the seat belt shall be Type 2 as defined in S3. of
FMVSS No. 209 (49 CFR 571.209). For school buses with a GVWR greater
than 4,536 kg (10,000 pounds), the seat belt shall be Type 1 or Type 2
as defined in S3. of FMVSS No. 209 (49 CFR 571.209).
S4.1.3.2 * * *
(a) For a small occupant seating position of a flexible occupancy
seat, as defined in 49 CFR 571.222, the school bus torso belt anchor
point must be 400 mm or more vertically above the seating reference
point (SgRP) or adjustable to 400 mm or more vertically above the SgRP.
For all other seating positions, the school bus torso belt anchor point
must be 520 mm or more vertically above the SgRP or adjustable to 520
mm or more vertically above the SgRP. The school bus torso belt
adjusted height at each seating position shall be adjustable to no more
than 280 mm vertically above the SgRP in the lowest position and no
less than the required vertical height of the school bus torso belt
anchor point for that seating position in the highest position. (See
Figure 4.)
* * * * *
[[Page 66698]]
[GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] TR29OC10.001
0
3. Section 571.222 is amended by revising S5.1.5 and adding S5.1.5.1
and S5.1.5.2 to read as follows:
Sec. 571.222 Standard No. 222; School bus passenger seating and crash
protection.
* * * * *
S5.1.5 Seat cushion latching and retention.
(a) School bus passenger seat cushions equipped with attachment
devices that allow for the seat cushion to be removable without tools
or to flip up must have a self-latching mechanism that latches when
subjected to the conditions specified in S5.1.5.1. The seat cushion
shall not separate from the seat at any attachment point when subjected
to the conditions specified in S5.1.5.2 after being subjected to the
conditions of S5.1.5.1.
(b) School bus passenger seat cushions that are removable only with
the use of tools shall not separate from the seat at any attachment
point when subjected to the conditions of S5.1.5.2.
S5.1.5.1 Release the seat cushion self-latching mechanism. Lift the
seat cushion then place the seat cushion back in the down position
without activating the self-latching mechanism, if possible. Apply a
downward force of 216 N (48.4 pounds) to the center of the seat
cushion. The downward force shall be applied in any period of not less
than 1 and not more than 5 seconds, and maintained for 5 seconds.
S5.1.5.2 Apply an upward force of 5 times the weight of the seat
cushion to the center of the bottom of the seat cushion. The upward
force shall be applied in any period of not less than 1 and not more
than 5 seconds, and maintained for 5 seconds.
* * * * *
Issued on: October 20, 2010.
David L. Strickland,
Administrator.
[FR Doc. 2010-27312 Filed 10-28-10; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4910-59-P