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Seatbelts to be mandatory on new highway buses: Transport Canada

All newly built highway buses will be required to have seatbelts by 2020. AP Photo/Seth Wenig

Transport Canada says they will soon require all newly built highway buses to have seatbelts.

The federal department says they will make seatbelts mandatory on medium and large highway buses starting Sept. 1, 2020.

They say seatbelts have a strong and proven record of saving lives.

The department says it first proposed the change in 2017.

Mandatory seatbelts on buses has been discussed since April 6 when a bus carrying the Humboldt Broncos junior hockey team collided with a semi-truck in rural Saskatchewan.

WATCH: Humboldt Broncos fatal bus crash prompts calls for better highway safety

Click to play video: 'Humboldt Broncos fatal bus crash prompts calls for better highway safety'
Humboldt Broncos fatal bus crash prompts calls for better highway safety

Sixteen people were killed and 13 others were injured in the crash.

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A lawsuit filed by the parents of one of the players this week asked for a court order requiring all buses carrying sports teams in Saskatchewan to be equipped with seatbelts.

Click to play video: 'Family of Adam Herold, youngest Bronco, sues driver of semi'
Family of Adam Herold, youngest Bronco, sues driver of semi

Transport Canada says medium-sized buses are defined as having a weight over 4,536 kilograms.

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They say small buses, with the exception of school buses, are already required to have lap and shoulder belts. The department says the new rules won’t apply to school buses, because they are already designed to protect children in a crash.

Operators can install them voluntarily if they meet Transport Canada’s requirements.

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