Lin used to work for a more established company, but he didn't like the rules: "I had to wear a uniform. I couldn't talk to passengers while driving. I couldn't smoke around the bus," he says. His old company usually hired separate drivers for the trips to and from D.C., and the bus was equipped with a speed governor that prevented the driver from breaking the posted limit. "Everybody speeds a little," says Lin, who traveled at a steady 70 mph along a stretch of highway marked at 55 while many passengers dozed in the half-empty bus. What none of them knew was that Eastern has one of the worst safety records of any American bus company, ranking in the top 5 percent in unsafe-driving violations.
More than 750 million passengers travel by motor coach each year?more than those who take Amtrak and domestic flights combined. The number is up recently, due in part to the weak economy?when money is tight, people take the bus. Nowadays, they have an abundance of options. Dozens of new carriers have joined established companies such as Greyhound and Peter Pan. Many of them, like Eastern, are curbside operators that keep overhead low by forgoing a terminal and picking up and dropping off passengers on a public street.
But there's a hidden cost to a cheap ride, as the nearly 30 fatalities from bus accidents in 2011 illustrate well. March was a particularly bad month, beginning with a grisly crash in the Bronx. A bus returning to New York City's Chinatown from the Mohegan Sun casino in Connecticut flipped on its side and skidded into a highway signpost, killing 15 people and injuring 18 more. Two days later, an accident on the New Jersey Turnpike killed one passenger and the driver. One week later, a chartered motorcoach rolled over on a New Hampshire highway, resulting in several serious injuries.
On May 31, there was another deadly crash on Interstate 95, just outside Doswell, Va. The motorcoach, operated by a company called Sky Express, was in the right-hand lane just before 5 am, halfway through a 10-hour trip from North Carolina to New York City. As the highway curved gently to the left, the driver?who later admitted to falling asleep at the wheel?didn't alter course. The bus traversed a section of rumble strips before it crossed the shoulder entirely and kept going onto a grass embankment. It careened 381 feet before it rolled onto its roof and finally skidded to a rest another 80 feet from where it had left the highway.
The roof was crushed and the windows shattered. Like most motorcoaches, the 37-year-old bus had no passenger seatbelts. First responders were faced with chaos: From inside the bus came groans of pain and screams for help. Outside, broken glass, duffel bags, and suitcases littered the ground. All 58 passengers had to be transported to area hospitals, dozens with serious injuries. Four passengers died. The only person who didn't require professional medical care was the driver, 37-year-old Kin Yiu Cheung. He was also the only person on the bus whose seat was equipped with a seatbelt.
For many years, intercity bus travel was extremely safe. In the 1980s and 1990s, there were about six to 10 motorcoach fatalities annually (a figure that includes intercity buses and chartered tour buses but excludes school buses and municipal city buses). Then a disturbing trend emerged. "We started to see the numbers creep up to around 25 to 30 fatalities a year, which worried us considerably," says Norm Littler, executive director of the Bus Industry Safety Council, a group of industry veterans that develops and promotes motorcoach safety procedures.
The increased risk corresponds to the rapid growth of bus carriers in the late 1990s, Littler says. "There was a lot of capital around. The bus manufacturers started doing what [automakers in] Detroit did: They would build buses when they didn't have sales, put them on the lots, and basically try to collar anybody into buying one." At the time, Littler was getting frequent calls from people who wanted to start bus companies. "I would go through the various regulatory requirements, and it became very obvious very quickly they didn't care about that," he says.
Then, on Mother's Day in 1999, a chartered bus destined for a Mississippi casino ran off the road and plowed through a chain-link fence and into an embankment. Twenty-two people were killed and another 22 injured. "The driver should never have been behind the wheel," Littler says. "He had severe medical problems. He had a long history of drug use. It was a relatively new company that grew very rapidly and simply should not have been in operation."
The crash turned out to be a harbinger. Between 1999 and 2009, 251 people were killed in 67 motorcoach crashes, according to a study by the American Bus Association. More than half the deaths took place on carriers that had already been cited by federal inspectors for unsafe practices; many of those were newcomers to the industry.
The division of the department of Transportation charged with governing bus safety is known as the Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration (FMCSA). In recent years, the FMCSA has had a hard time keeping up with the expanding and evolving industry. The Mother's Day crash prompted new standards that would require rigorous inspection of any new bus company within its first six months of operation. The federal law included medical requirements for drivers similar to what the Federal Aviation Administration mandates for pilots. Enforcement, though, remains weak. The driver in the March 2011 Bronx crash was working under a false name. Cheung, the driver in the Virginia crash, could not speak English, even though federal law requires it. Bus drivers are supposed to keep a log of their duty hours, and many companies use electronic punch-in systems to prevent the fudging of paper records. Sky Express relied on old-fashioned paper logbooks, and Cheung?who was charged with reckless driving and involuntary manslaughter?hadn't updated his for two days. His behavior was not unusual. And neither was his ability to get away with it before the deadly accident.
As it turned out, the FMCSA had cited Sky Express drivers for fatigue an astounding 48 times in the two years preceding the Virginia crash. The company had violations for unsafe driving, vehicle maintenance, and hours-of-service rules that dictate how long a driver can remain behind the wheel. The upstart carrier?which owned 31 buses and employed 53 drivers?had had four prior highway accidents and the single worst score of any American bus company in the Driver Fitness category. Still, the FMCSA hadn't taken Sky Express off the road.
Michele Beckjord, a survival factors expert at the National Transportation Safety Board (NTSB), says this isn't unusual. "We've got a lot of unsafe carriers that are getting a 'Satisfactory' rating, but they've got major violations either in maintenance or in driver performance and behavior." The problem, she says, is that in order to reach the Unsatisfactory level in the FMCSA's numerical evaluation system, a bus carrier has to have terrible scores in several different areas.
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