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  2. Emergency evacuation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Emergency_evacuation

    Operation guide metal plate for emergency exits installed in the school bus window. The most common equipment in buildings to facilitate emergency evacuations are fire alarms, exit signs, and emergency lights. Some structures need special emergency exits or fire escapes to ensure the availability of alternative escape paths.

  3. School bus - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/School_bus

    When a school bus is sold for usage outside of student transport, NHTSA regulations require that its identification as a school bus be removed. [2] To do so, all school bus lettering must be removed or covered while the exterior must be painted a color different than school bus yellow; the stop arm(s) and warning lamps must be removed or ...

  4. NYPD Emergency Service Unit - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/NYPD_Emergency_Service_Unit

    Members of ESU are cross-trained in multiple disciplines for police, medical, and rescue work. ESU is always on patrol (all three tours, 365 days a year) with 10 Heavy Rescue trucks, each ordinarily manned by a police officer and a sergeant, and often more than twice as many smaller Radio Emergency Patrol vehicles containing two ESU police ...

  5. School bus contractor - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/School_bus_contractor

    An IC Bus CE series operated by First Student. A school bus contractor is a private company or proprietorship that provides student transport services to a school district or non-public school. Of the 450,000 school buses operating in the United States, it is estimated that approximately 39% are operated by school buses contractors.

  6. U.S. Bus Corporation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/U.S._Bus_Corporation

    U.S. Bus Corporation of Suffern, New York was a manufacturer of small and mid-sized school buses and non-school buses, such as those used by churches and day care centers. U.S. Bus became Trans Tech in November 2007. [1] U.S. Bus body with Chevrolet chassis

  7. 1995 Fox River Grove bus–train collision - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1995_Fox_River_Grove_bus...

    The school bus involved in the accident was a 71-passenger school bus built by American Transportation Company (which was acquired by Navistar International at the time of the accident), and was owned and operated by School Districts 47 and 155 through a Transportation Joint Agreement. At the time of the accident, 35 students were on board.

  8. School bus crossing arm - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/School_bus_crossing_arm

    A crossing arm is a safety device intended to protect children from being struck while crossing in front of a school bus. Typically, school bus crossing arms are wire or plastic devices which extend from the front bumper on the right side of the bus when the door is open for loading/unloading and form a barrier. The devices force children, who ...

  9. Ward Body Works - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ward_Body_Works

    Ward Body Works (also known as Ward Industries and Ward School Bus Manufacturing, Inc.) was an American bus manufacturer. Headquartered in Conway, Arkansas , Ward specialized in yellow school buses , alongside buses for other uses.