August 24, 2009 11:31 AM

The Wheels on the Bus Go … Away

By
CBSNews
Buses are parked in a row at a Cypress-Fairbanks Independent School District transportation center, Aug. 7, 2009 in Houston. In a cost-saving measure, the school district will stop busing students who live within two miles of their school this year. (AP P

Buses are parked in a row at a Cypress-Fairbanks Independent School District transportation center, Aug. 7, 2009 in Houston. In a cost-saving measure, the school district will stop busing students who live within two miles of their school this year. (AP P (AP Photo/David J. Phillip)

(AP)  As a mother of two, Feleccia Moore-Davis is accustomed to the usual back-to-school swirl of new supplies, new clothes and new routines. But this year, that final flurry of summer is accompanied by an unusual worry.

Moore-Davis does not yet know how her children will get to school.

Last month, the financially pressed Houston-area school district her two daughters attend decided to end bus service for students living within two miles of schools. Now Moore-Davis is contemplating the bustling intersections and streets without sidewalks the girls would have to navigate if they walked to school, and wondering whether her own work schedule can be reconfigured for drop-offs and pickups.

It is a dilemma facing thousands of parents across the country, as cash-strapped school districts from California to Florida have cut bus routes to chip away at spending.

"I'm still trying to figure out how I will do this," said Moore-Davis, who has one daughter entering middle school and another entering high school. "My youngest is very concerned about who's going to pick her up. She keeps asking me about it."

About 23 percent of school districts surveyed by the American Association of School Administrators say they are reducing or eliminating school transportation for the coming school year as part of cost-cutting measures. That's up from the 14 percent who considered such measures during the 2008-2009 year.

"I've seen it happening in Massachusetts, in Ohio, in Indiana. A lot of school districts are looking at in varying degrees," said Robin Leeds, industry specialist with the National School Transportation Association.

Parents and transportation advocates say the proposed cuts will have wide-ranging repercussions - affecting everything from parents' work schedules to student attendance. Many also worry that the cuts will jeopardize the safety of students who may have to cross busy highways or dangerous roads to get to class. Deadly school bus crashes are rare, while past studies have shown riding to school in a car, walking and bicycling account for hundreds of student deaths a year.

"The Early Show": Back to School Special Section

For their part, school districts say trimming student transportation is a painful but necessary way of coping with reductions in state funding and a drop in property tax revenue.

Most states reimburse only a portion of bus service costs, saddling local districts with the bulk of the expense of transporting students. In addition, most states do not reimburse the costs of transporting students who live within a specified distance from school.

In Brockton, Mass., near Boston, the school district expects to save $500,000 by taking 10 school buses off the road in September, adding to the 20 already cut last year.

In Cobb County, Ga., a district facing a $58 million deficit, the school board recently voted to consolidate bus routes by eliminating 8,500 stops - about 15 percent of the total in the district. The school district revised plans to eliminate 11,000 bus stops and changed stops to avoid busy streets after dozens of angry parents showed up at a school board meeting.

School districts throughout California are grappling with severe cuts in state funding, including a 20 percent cut in funding for school transportation in the new state budget. Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger had lobbied for a 65 percent reduction, but relented after a chorus of protests.

After losing about $9 million in state funding, the state's Novato Unified School District decided to eliminate all bus service except for special education students. The move will affect about 600 of the district's 8,000 students.

"We were trying to avoid hitting classrooms," said Marla Blackledge, Novato's chief financial officer.

Even before the drop in funding, state money covered less than half the costs of school bus service, Blackledge said.

"This was just the last straw," she said. "But we do have concerns for working parents, how their kids will get to school, how they will get to day care, about parents living in poverty who don't have a car to drive kids to school. We're concerned about whether the kids will come to school at all."

In Texas, the state reimburses districts according to a formula set in 1983. Last year, the Cypress-Fairbanks school district, which Moore-Davis' two daughters attend, spent $32 million for student transportation services, but only got $6.4 million in reimbursement.

Texas also does not reimburse the cost of transporting students who live within two miles of school.

In the past, the district absorbed the extra costs, but this year, the district is confronting a $14 million budget deficit and no longer can do that, Superintendent David Anthony said in a letter to parents.

In addition to cutting service within the two-mile limit, the district will no longer offer "late" bus services for students who stay after school for extracurricular activities. About 16,000 of the district's 104,000 students will be affected by the changes.

Moore-Davis' job as vice president for student learning at a local community college gives her more flexibility than most working parents, but she says many of her neighbors are not so lucky.

"A lot of people are experiencing economic hardship. There are families that need to have two jobs and can't just stop in the middle of day to pick up children," Moore-Davis said. "And they're concerned about the security of their children."

AP
Add a Comment See all 21 Comments
by barbaram99 August 24, 2009 2:24 PM EDT
We are talking about fully sighted abled boys and girls are we not. That said. The mass transit is used by pupils. I was bussed to school years ago in the small towns. I am legally blind with other handicapps. What wrong with the children being at stops where they can picked up in the same area. Mum, they ride the mass tranit I do here. If yer area has mass tranit then the children should learn to use it. They have cell have they can carry if that will ease yer mind. If the school is in walking rance then they walk. I walk to places on foot. They have bikes..I am awre of the tons of cars out there. Yer child's job is school and yers is yer job as parents dealing with the changes and finding the right way for them to get to school. It may mean you leave earily then ye would. Answers are out there and with computer ye can find info needed. I realise it is different from my day. I think the answers are there. I use to live in places growing up that did not have side walks. Learnt to walk facing the traffic and hand signals as they need to know where I am going. I use a white cane. There is the white cane law. Children can walk to places they know. It may mean getting safety items for them.
Reply to this comment
by rightbehind August 24, 2009 1:55 PM EDT
If you wanted proof of generational theft there it is. Republican ideology at work.
Reply to this comment
by trixie8476 August 24, 2009 1:13 PM EDT
It's not that the world is more dangerous as far as kids being kidnapped, but what is truly a concern is that towns are not built in a way that is conducive to foot traffic anymore. There is no way my kids could walk to school in our town because there are no shoulders on the very busy roads. Many towns are like this so busing is needed.
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by pollroller1 August 24, 2009 1:25 PM EDT
I have to agree, when I went to school we did have sidewalks. I didn't think about that.
by bytheway59 August 24, 2009 1:09 PM EDT
ah, the fiscally conservatives dream coming to fruition.
Reply to this comment
by rightbehind August 24, 2009 1:54 PM EDT
Republican ideology at it's best. Dummy down the masses. Concessions anyone?
by specialty8 August 24, 2009 12:31 PM EDT
"yes we can" change we can beleive in!
Reply to this comment
by rightbehind August 24, 2009 1:53 PM EDT
It works this way cause and effect. President Obama hasn't even been in office 1 year and your looking to blame him. Why don't you have a look at no bid contracts, 10 billion a month in Iraq, outsourcing to 3RD world countries.
by pollroller1 August 24, 2009 12:17 PM EDT
I'm going to say one more thing and then I'll shut up,LOL A lot of the buses I see running up and down the roads only have a few kids on them. I sometimes get stuck at our local school crossing and the buses I see pulling out of the parking lots don't have many kids on them at all. Seems to me like a big waste of money running these big gas burners to haul a few kids.
Reply to this comment
by gramto8 August 24, 2009 12:30 PM EDT
In our county, the buses go from the high school to the middle school, then to the elementary schools. They pick up the kids of the neighborhoods to which they deliver from each school and then go out on the route. This keeps the kids from having to change buses at each school which could potentially cause injury to any student from a fall or by being hit. This could be the reason you see so few students on the bus.
by pollroller1 August 24, 2009 1:23 PM EDT
OK, I can buy that.
by ianlou August 24, 2009 11:46 AM EDT
Our school district privatize the bus drivers. Now they make $10 bucks an hour with no benefits.

Parents have started complaining about the diminishing quality of the Bus Drivers.

They say that the new bus drivers don't seem nearly as concerned about losing their jobs through bad behavior.

Well Duhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhh.

Want Otto driving your kids while Blottoed?
Pay him so little, he doesn?t care.

Where are the dependable drivers? They went off and got better jobs.
Reply to this comment
by rightbehind August 24, 2009 11:49 AM EDT
Privatising creating mediocrity! Say it isn't so!
by ianlou August 24, 2009 12:05 PM EDT
Just wait till the economy improves.
$10 Bus drivers will be nothing but winos and crack-bimbos.
by kristins126 August 24, 2009 11:42 AM EDT
My kids' school district does not have busing at all. Elementary kids walk; middle and high schoolers walk or take the city bus if it's more than a couple of miles. The daycare centers all send their own buses or vans to pick up kids at the elementary schools.
A truly rural district is one thing--but I have a hard time wrapping my head around the concept that kids who live only a few blocks from school need a bus, or parent, to take them.
Reply to this comment
by rightbehind August 24, 2009 11:50 AM EDT
True but public mass transit should provide the service in town.
by pollroller1 August 24, 2009 11:11 AM EDT
I know this may sound cold, but when I went to school back in the 40s. I WALKED!!!
I'm sorry, but this is part of why kids today are so overweight. They get on the bus, or ride in a car to school. When they get home, they sit in front of the TV. I'm sure that someone from the neighborhood could walk with these kids to school. Maybe take turns.
Reply to this comment
by gramto8 August 24, 2009 12:24 PM EDT
Back in the 40's, things weren't as dangerous as they are now. Now people get kidnapped even while talking to someone on a cell phone while barely out of sight of their home. Kids have been kidnapped shortly after getting off school buses while walking the remainder of the distance to their rural homes. And, lest we forget, traffic is immensely worse now than it could have been dreamed of in the 40's. Being in a group would not help. It would just make a bigger target for an idiot to run their car into.
by Benton09 August 24, 2009 11:03 AM EDT
Sad when this goes on in school districts and yet we spend Billions upon Billions with the Industrial War Complex on wars we will never win. The United States has lost it's priorties. Rich warmongers get richer on the lives of the middle class (if one's left) and the poor.
It's always been this way, but it seems so much worse today.
Reply to this comment
by rightbehind August 24, 2009 11:47 AM EDT
You got that right. Everyone forgets about how we got to this point. We need to get rid of what's left of the republican party. They have brought poverty to this Great Nation. We used to be the nation every other nation look to.
by sjc_1 August 25, 2009 12:23 PM EDT
The cost of the buses may not come down, but we will have the money to pay for them. Corporations have gone from paying 40% of the national budget to 7% today. It is time they paid the freight for doing business in America.
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