Friday, December 9, 2005 9:57 PM CST
Weather strands school bus
By DAVE FOPAY, Staff Writer
CHARLESTON -- Icy roads caused a school bus carrying special education students to be stuck for about three hours Thursday.
The bus couldn’t get up a hill on a rural road south of the Charleston Country Club but was eventually towed up the hill and all the children got home safely, school district and bus company representatives said.
“They were very well cared-for,” school district Superintendent Gary Niehaus said. “It was bad that it happened but the kids were safe.”
A couple of things complicated attempts at getting the bus going again, said Lynda Luksander, manager at Laidlaw Education Services, the bus company employed by the district.
First, it was impossible to contact township road crews because they were already out plowing snow, she said. Also, it was difficult to decide how to get the bus up the hill because of the children on board and their limitations, she explained.
Niehaus said a tow truck eventually got the bus up the hill, and it was back at the Laidlaw garage by 7 p.m. A parent picked up one of the seven students but the bus took the rest home, he said. The bus was taking the students home after classes at Mattoon’s Armstrong Center.
Both Niehaus and Luksander credited the bus driver and student aides on the bus for doing the best they could during the incident.
“I felt the driver and everybody on there did the right thing,” Luksander said. She also said nearly all the students’ parents were understanding and appreciative of how the situation was handled.
Niehaus said he thought Thursday’s weather pattern, with snow almost turning to rain at one point, made the hill icier than might have been expected. The bus had just come down one hill but couldn’t make it back up another, and ended up getting stuck at an angle in the road, he said.
There was no school in Charleston Friday because of snowy roads, but the district didn’t dismiss early during Thursday’s snowfall. Niehaus said all the district’s school buses are back at the garage by 5 p.m. most days, and on Thursday all the other buses had returned by 5:30 p.m.
“We were able to get everyone home,” he said. He added that he still felt it would have been difficult to notify parents if children had been sent home early Thursday, but said it might be good to try to find a way to make such a notification.
“I guess I’m always searching for a better way to do that,” he said. “At this point, I’m not sure how to do that.”
Luksander admitted that road conditions at the regular dismissal time Thursday were “hairy at best” but said she understood Niehaus’ concerns about children going home early without parents knowing about it.
“It’s difficult to make those decisions,” she said. She said buses were able to pick up the district’s younger students and some who live in rural areas earlier than usual.
Contact Dave Fopay at dfopay@jg-tc.com or 348-5733.
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Congrats! wrote on Apr 10, 2007 9:35 AM: