PEI school bus passing persists despite strict penalties and recent fatality
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Topics in This Edition
Summary
The segment examines ongoing failures by drivers to stop for school buses with flashing red lights in Prince Edward Island, despite strict penalties. It highlights dashcam evidence from a parent, the May 2026 fatality of 13-year-old Isabella Bastardo Jiménez, and comments from a veteran bus driver on near-weekly violations. Enforcement challenges are detailed with 2025 complaint and charge figures from RCMP, alongside discussion of past camera use and current provincial considerations for new technology, route changes, and education campaigns.
Editorial Assessment
The broadcast accurately conveys verified facts on penalties, the specific tragedy, and enforcement gaps, drawing from named local sources and recent RCMP data. Viewers may miss broader context on how PEI's fines compare quantitatively to other provinces or details on why 2011 cameras failed. Framing emphasizes safety needs without overstating enforcement success or blaming any single party. No unsubstantiated claims; sourcing is transparent and multi-sided.
Key Moments
PEI has some of Canada's toughest penalties for passing a stopped school bus: 3-month suspension and up to $5,000 fine.
Confirmed by multiple PEI government and safety sources describing it as among the highest fines with mandatory suspension.
13-year-old Isabella Bastardo Jiménez was struck and killed crossing to board her bus; truck driver not charged as bus used yellow lights only.
Matches RCMP statements and multiple CBC reports from May-June 2026 on the Dunstaffnage incident.
Last year Island RCMP received 108 complaints leading to only 16 charges.
Directly corroborated in recent CBC reporting citing RCMP data.
PEI installed cameras on buses in 2011 but discontinued them due to ineffectiveness.
Supported by 2015 CBC coverage of the program outcomes.