(201) Family Holiday 2018 | Page 12

SPECIAL PARENT School Bus Safety WRITTEN BY NICHOLAS KATZBAN AND CURTIS TATE ince a school bus crash on Route 80 ended the lives of a Paramus fifth-grader and one of her teachers in May, a litany of bills from federal and state lawmakers focus- ing on driving records and physical fitness have been proposed. But those bills, some of which focus on notification systems for suspended licenses or seat belt use, do little to address gaps in oversight and regula- tion of private school bus fleets, an investigation by the USA Today Network New Jersey has found. That has left an already vulnerable population — special needs students — at risk. Special needs students are often bused from their home school system to a district that has programs better suited to their educational needs. And a variety of third-party busing providers, from small to large, are used across the state to transport students out of their home districts. “Some bus companies are very big and have all kinds of technology,” says Kim Cristo of Waldwick, whose daugh- ter attends a special needs program in another district. “Some are just run out of a house and are sort of a one-man band.” Among the problems plaguing transportation for these students are a nationwide shortage of drivers, low pay and a practice of accepting the “lowest acceptable bid” for the third-party com- panies typically hired for these routes. In addition, the background check system — from the state agencies that conduct them down to the school districts that do the hiring — can leave parents of special needs students in the dark about who is driving their children. 10 HOLIDAY 2018 | (201) FAMILY WHOM ARE WE TRUSTING? Bus drivers and aides are required to submit a criminal background check that is conducted by independent bus operators or the school districts they are contracted to serve, says Michael Yaple, a spokesman for the state Department of Education. However, it’s common practice for school districts to trust the bus compa- nies that will be transporting special needs students when they say all drivers and aides have been cleared by state authorities. “They sign in their contract that they are responsible for making sure,” says Kathy Vuoncino, a director for special education transportation in the Northern Valley regional high schools. “That’s been the trust factor that we have. We’re not liable for that.” But research suggests that only 50 to 80 percent of commercial drivers nationwide self-report their convictions and traffic violations, according to a report from the American Association of Motor Vehicle Administrators. Tech- nically, drivers are required to report a violation to their employer within one day of its occurrence. If they don’t, it could be up to a year before their employer is notified by the respective motor vehicle agency. “Parents aren’t given info on who is driving the bus,” Cristo says. “All that info is on the contract, but we’re not given access to that contract.” When Cristo sought a copy of the contract awarded to her daughter’s bus company by filing a public records request with the Waldwick school district, she was simply told to contact Mahwah. “I didn’t know if they meant the district or the region,” she says. “The letter was very nebulous.” ● S SPECIAL NEEDS PARENTS SAY GAPS IN SYSTEM PUT THEIR CHILDREN AT RISK