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Investigators probe bus wreckage as victims’ relatives grieve

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Terri Kasinga, a Caltrans representative, said that after a bus carrying teenagers and their chaperons home from a religious retreat crashed near Lake Arrowhead in February 2011, killing one and seriously injuring 10 others, the agency began discussing whether to restrict buses from that mountainous stretch.

But, Kasinga said, “it was decided against doing that because they needed to be able to get people up” to church camps and other tourist destinations. She was not aware of any discussions about restricting buses from California 38.

More than 20,000 people were injured and 250 killed in bus-related crashes in 2009, the most recent year for which information is available, according to the NTSB.

Questions remain about the location of Scapadas Magicas, which maintains an office in National City but also parks buses in Tijuana, where Sunday’s bus tour originated.

Sgt. Dave Dreher of the CHP’s Border Division Commercial Enforcement Unit said that inspection standards are the same for “every single bus,” no matter its origin.

“Every one of them are held to the same state and national standards. There is no difference on an inspection on a Mexican-licensed bus and one registered in L.A.,” Dreher said.

There are two general types of inspections, Dreher said, annual and random. The annual inspections are done “when there is a bus terminal, regardless of where the company itself is located. If they have a terminal in California, all buses assigned to that terminal are subject to an annual inspection” by the CHP,” he said.

“In my experience, when we run the unannounced inspection lanes in the San Ysidro area, for example, we may on a typical day, we may inspect 45 to 60 buses and I would not be surprised” if four, five or six of those were taken out of service for various violations.

But buses coming across the border are not treated the same as other commercial vehicles, Dreher said. Under the North American Free Trade Agreement, every tractor-trailer coming into the United States from Mexico is required to be inspected. Buses are not, however, Dreher said.

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