The single-vehicle collision involved a bus which rolled over and pinned a child underneath, Police said. (Kate Dubinski/CBC)
Peters said this is the second time her children have been involved in a bus crash. Earlier this year, the school bus they were in collided with another vehicle, she said, adding that it was not as serious as what happened on Tuesday.
Although she’s grateful that there were no catastrophic injuries, Peters wonders why there aren’t seatbelts on school buses which could help avoid such situations, she said.
“In what other area do we have a whole bunch of little kids on these seats just able to bounce around and fall? It just seems to odd, especially because we’ve had to deal with things with like kids getting up and walking around when they shouldn’t be,” she said.
“It just seemed weird to me that with all the other precautions and safety things that we have here in Canada that we don’t have seatbelts on a bus for 40 kids. And one bus driver, like it was a bit of a bad recipe.”
When responding to the incident during a news conference on Tuesday, Ontario’s Education Minister Stephen sidestepped a question about why there aren’t seatbelts on school buses.
“This just happened so let’s allow this independent school to conclude an investigation and let’s focus on the safety of the children. I think our focus right now should be our collective prayer to make sure these kids are safe and they get home,” said Lecce.
The driver of the bus also suffered minor injuries, police said. He’s scheduled to appear in Woodstock court on April 18.
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