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Bakersfield Personal Injury Attorneys

Bakersfield Bus
Accident Lawyers

Buses owe their passengers the highest duty of care under California law — and claims against a public transit agency can expire in as little as six months. If you were hurt on a bus, don’t wait.

“They took my case when other firms turned me down. They found care providers near me for all my treatments and fought to get me the highest compensation possible. I highly recommend Valero Law.”

Jose R. Google Review

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Free Consultations
No Fee Unless We Win
Serving All of Kern County
100% Confidential Fast Response

$500M+

Recovered for clients

20+ Yrs

Fighting for the injured

$6.25M

Largest settlement in Kern County

No Fee

Unless we win

Bakersfield bus accidents

When You Trust a Bus, You Deserve to Be Safe

Thousands of Bakersfield residents climb aboard a bus every day — riding Golden Empire Transit to work, taking a school bus to class, or boarding a charter or tour bus down Highway 99. When you step on board, you place your safety in someone else’s hands. When a driver, company, or agency fails that trust, the injuries can be devastating.

A Bakersfield bus accident lawyer can hold the responsible parties accountable and pursue full compensation for your medical bills, lost wages, and pain. Because claims against public agencies move on a short clock, the sooner you call, the better. Your first consultation is free.

Real results

A Track Record That Speaks for Itself

Insurance companies count on injured people accepting a quick, lowball offer. We don’t let them. Over 20 years, our attorneys have recovered more than $500 million for injured Californians — including the largest personal-injury settlement in Kern County.

$6.25M

Confidential settlement

Believed to be the largest personal-injury settlement in Kern County.

$5M

Motor-vehicle accident

Brachial plexus injury suffered in a vehicle collision.

$3M

Auto accident

Back and neck injury settlement.

Prior results do not guarantee a similar outcome. Every case is different.

The highest duty of care

Buses Are Common Carriers — and That Changes Everything

A bus is what the law calls a common carrier: a business that transports the public for a fee. That includes Golden Empire Transit city buses, school buses, and the charter and tour buses that travel through Kern County. Under California Civil Code §2100, common carriers owe their passengers the highest duty of care — a far stricter standard than the ordinary care every other driver owes on the road.

In practice, that means a bus operator must use the utmost care and diligence to keep riders safe. When a passenger is injured, that heightened standard can make it easier to prove the operator fell short — and easier to hold them accountable for the harm they caused.

Why Bus Injuries Are So Often Severe

Unlike cars, most buses are not equipped with passenger seatbelts. In a collision, riders are thrown into seats, poles, windows, and one another. Combined with a bus’s sheer size and weight, that often turns even a moderate crash into a catastrophic-injury event.

City transit buses School buses Charter & tour buses Shuttle & paratransit
Act fast — the clock is short

Suing a Public Transit Agency? You May Have Only 6 Months

Many Bakersfield buses are run by a government body — Golden Empire Transit, a school district, or the city or county. Claims against a public entity are not ordinary lawsuits. Before you can sue, you must file a formal government claim, and that deadline can be as short as six months from the date of your injury under California Government Code §911.2.

Miss that short window and your right to compensation can disappear — even if the agency was clearly at fault. By contrast, a claim against a private bus company generally falls under the standard two-year personal-injury deadline in Code of Civil Procedure §335.1. Because the rules turn on exactly who owned and operated the bus, the safest move is to call a lawyer immediately.

Multiple parties

Who Is Liable for a Bus Accident?

Bus crashes are rarely simple. More than one party often shares the blame, and each one may carry its own insurance and its own legal team. Identifying every responsible party is one of the most important parts of building your case — and one of the easiest to get wrong without an experienced attorney.

We investigate the cause of the crash, secure the evidence before it disappears, and pursue every party that contributed to your injuries so no source of compensation is overlooked.

Potentially Responsible Parties

  • The bus driver — for distraction, fatigue, speeding, or impairment
  • The transit agency or private bus company that employed the driver
  • Another motorist whose negligence caused the collision
  • A maintenance contractor that failed to service the bus
  • The bus or parts manufacturer if a defect contributed

When an employer is involved, it can be held responsible for the negligence of a driver acting in the course of their job — which often means more insurance coverage available to pay for your injuries.

Why crashes happen

Common Causes of Bus Accidents

Most bus crashes come down to negligence — a driver, company, or agency that failed to use the care the law demands. On busy Bakersfield corridors like Highway 99, Highway 58, and Ming Avenue, even a single lapse can injure dozens of passengers at once.

Distracted driving — texting, phones, or eating behind the wheel

Speeding or driving too fast for traffic and road conditions

Driver fatigue from long routes and demanding schedules

Driving under the influence of alcohol or drugs

Poorly maintained brakes, tires, or steering systems

Inadequate driver training, screening, or supervision

Bus crash injuries

Common Bus Accident Injuries We Handle

Because passengers ride without seatbelts and a bus carries enormous force, the injuries from a bus crash tend to be more serious than those from an ordinary fender-bender — and they can change a life in an instant.

Head & Brain Trauma

Without a seatbelt to restrain them, passengers are thrown into seats, poles, and windows — a common cause of concussions and traumatic brain injuries.

Spinal Cord & Back Injuries

The force of a bus collision can herniate discs or damage the spinal cord, sometimes causing partial or permanent loss of mobility.

Broken Bones

Passengers standing or seated without restraints are often thrown about the cabin, fracturing arms, ribs, hips, and legs on impact.

Neck & Whiplash Injuries

Sudden stops and rear-end impacts snap the head forward and back, straining the neck and soft tissue for months afterward.

Internal Injuries

Blunt force from a hard cabin surface can damage internal organs — injuries that are not always obvious right away but can turn life-threatening.

Lacerations & Crush Injuries

Shattered glass, twisted metal, and crowded cabins leave passengers with deep cuts, scarring, and crush injuries to the limbs.

No matter how minor your injuries seem at first, see a doctor and document everything. Some of the most serious conditions — like internal bleeding or a brain injury — don’t show symptoms until days later.

After the crash

What to Do After a Bus Accident

What you do in the hours and days after a bus crash can make or break your claim — especially when a public agency is involved and the deadline is short. Here’s how to protect your health and your case.

1
1

Call 911 and get checked out

Report the crash and see a doctor even if you feel okay — bus passengers often have internal or soft-tissue injuries that surface days later.

2
2

Document everything you can

Photos of the bus, the scene, and your injuries, plus the bus route or number, the operator, and the names of fellow passengers and witnesses.

3
3

Don’t give a recorded statement

The transit agency or bus company’s insurer is not on your side. Anything you say can be used to shrink — or deny — your payout.

4
4

Call Valero fast

Claims against a public agency can have a deadline as short as six months. We handle the investigation and the paperwork, and can come to your home or hospital.

What you can recover

Compensation After a Bus Accident

A serious crash brings bills that don’t stop just because you can’t work. California law lets injured bus passengers and motorists recover two kinds of damages.

Economic Damages

Calculable, out-of-pocket losses you can prove with bills and records.

  • Emergency care, surgery, and hospital bills
  • Ongoing physical therapy and rehabilitation
  • Lost wages and lost earning capacity
  • Future medical care for lasting injuries

Non-Economic Damages

The human cost of your injuries — subjective, but very real.

  • Pain and physical suffering
  • Disfigurement and permanent scarring
  • Loss of consortium and companionship
  • Lost future enjoyment of life
Personal attention. Big results.

Why Injured Passengers Choose Valero Law Group

We Take On Big Defendants

Transit agencies and bus companies have teams of lawyers. So do you. We’re not intimidated by deep-pocketed defendants.

No Fee Unless We Win

You pay nothing up front. We only get paid when we recover money for you.

We Speak Spanish

Hablamos Español. You’ll always understand your case and your options.

Available 24/7

Day or night, a real person is here when you or your family need help.

We Come to You

Injured and can’t travel? We’ll meet you at home or in the hospital.

$500M+ Recovered

Over 20 years fighting for the injured, including the largest PI settlement in Kern County.

See What Our Clients Are Saying...

400+ Reviews • 5 Stars on Google

“The first time I came into the office they welcomed me like I was family, and made sure to go over the whole process slowly and with great detail. My experience with this law firm was truly incredible and I can guarantee any client who decides to hire them will see exactly what I experienced.”

Jacob D.

Auto Accident

“Valero injury law firm made me feel comfortable like family and answered my questions no matter how small. They are completely committed to making sure you are taken care of. They are honest, they communicate with you, and they treat you like family.”

Elizabeth M.

Auto Accident

“After searching for an attorney, they truly were the only ones that looked at me as a person not just an easy case. Any question, no matter how small was answered. Any missed call was quickly returned. Even though they have many clients I never felt like I was not a priority.”

Nathan J.

Personal Injury

Local personal injury attorneys

Serving Bus Riders Across Bakersfield & Kern County

From the 99 Freeway to Ming Avenue, Stockdale Highway, and Rosedale Highway, we know Bakersfield’s busiest transit routes. We help injured bus passengers, drivers, and pedestrians across all of Kern County.

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Common questions

Bus Accident FAQ

How long do I have to file a bus accident claim in California?
It depends on who is responsible. Most personal injury claims must be filed within two years of the crash under California Code of Civil Procedure §335.1. But if your claim is against a public transit agency — such as Golden Empire Transit, a city, or a school district — you must first file a formal government claim, and that deadline can be as short as six months from the date of injury under Government Code §911.2. Missing that short window can end your case before it starts, so it is critical to talk to a lawyer right away.
Who can be held liable for a Bakersfield bus accident?
Often more than one party. Depending on the facts, liability may fall on the bus driver, the transit agency or private bus company that employed them, another negligent motorist who caused the crash, a maintenance contractor who failed to service the bus, or even the bus manufacturer if a defective part contributed. We investigate every potentially responsible party so no source of compensation is left on the table.
What is a “common carrier” and why does it matter?
A common carrier is a business that transports the public for a fee — including city buses, charter and tour buses, and school buses. Under California Civil Code §2100, common carriers owe their passengers the highest duty of care, well above the ordinary care every driver owes. That heightened standard can make it easier to hold a bus operator accountable when a passenger is injured.
Why are bus accident injuries so often severe?
Most buses are not equipped with passenger seatbelts, so in a collision riders are thrown into seats, poles, windows, and one another. Combined with a bus’s size and weight, that frequently leads to serious head, spine, and orthopedic injuries — even at moderate speeds.
What does it cost to hire a bus accident lawyer?
Nothing up front. We work on a contingency fee, which means you pay no attorney fees unless we win money for you. Your first consultation is always free and confidential.
How much is my Bakersfield bus accident case worth?
It depends on the severity of your injuries, your medical bills, lost income, and the long-term impact on your life. The insurance company’s first offer is almost always low. A free case review is the best way to understand what your claim is really worth — and our firm’s track record includes the largest personal-injury settlement in Kern County.

Sources: Cal. Civ. Code §2100 (common carrier duty of care) · Cal. Gov. Code §911.2 (government claim deadline) · Cal. Code Civ. Proc. §335.1 (2-year personal-injury deadline).

Injured on a Bus? Don’t Wait to Call.

A skilled Bakersfield bus accident lawyer will stand up to the transit agency or bus company — and go to court if that’s what it takes to get you full value. Your first consultation is free, and claims against a public agency can expire in as little as six months. Call now.

Available 24/7| Hablamos Español| No Fee Unless We Win

This page provides general information about California bus accident law and is not legal advice. Reading it does not create an attorney-client relationship. Prior results do not guarantee a similar outcome. For advice about your specific situation, speak with a licensed attorney.