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Interpretation ID: 2348y

Mr. Thomas D. Turner
Manager, Engineering Services
Blue Bird Body Company
P.O. Box 937
Fort Valley, GA 31030

Dear Mr. Turner:

This responds to your letter seeking an interpretation of the meaning of the term "front outboard designated seating position," for the purposes of Standards No. 202, Head Restraints (49 CFR 571.202) and No. 208, Occupant Crash Protection (49 CFR 571.208). Specifically, you referred to a typical seating arrangement on a small bus your company manufactures. In this seating arrangement, the driver's seating position is located immediately to the rear of the left side of dashboard. There are no other seating positions in the same row as the driver's seat. Instead, a side entrance door and stepwell are to the right of the driver's seat with an unobstructed passage between the driver's seat and the entrance door. To the rear of the driver's seat, there are four rows of passenger seats on each side of the bus, separated by a center aisle that runs the length of the bus. You offered your opinion that the forwardmost passenger seating position on the right side of the bus, which is to the rear of the driver's seating position and the entrance door and stepwell, is not a front outboard seating position for the purposes of Standards No. 202 and 208. Your understanding is correct.

While NHTSA has never specifically defined "front" seating positions, the agency has used that term to refer to the driver's seating position and all other seating positions in the same transverse or lateral row as the driver's seating position. In the small bus described in your letter, the forwardmost passenger seat on the right side of the bus is not in the same transverse row as the driver's seat; it is to the rear of that row. Therefore, the forwardmost passenger seat on the right side of your bus would not be a "front" seat for the purposes of Standards No. 202 or 208.

Sincerely,

Stephen P. Wood Acting Chief Counsel /ref:202#208 d:3/20/90