Pubdate: Sat, 27 Jan 2007 Source: Times Recorder (Zanesville, OH) Copyright: 2007 Times Recorder Contact: http://www.zanesvilletimesrecorder.com/apps/pbcs.dll/section?Category=CUSTOMERSERVICE20 Website: http://www.zanesvilletimesrecorder.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2740 Author: GI Smith, Staff Writer Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/testing.htm (Drug Test) LOCAL DISTRICTS STICK TO STATE REGULATIONS WITH BUS DRIVERS Just about every school district is feeling a sharp financial pinch and is finding ways to tighten its already skin-tight budget. Local school districts know - as the Columbus Public Schools District is finding out - shaving large sums of the student transportation budget isn't a good idea. What's at stake when red lines go through the transportation budget is safety. The Columbus City School District canceled classes Thursday after a contractor responsible for some school bus routes discovered it had not checked drivers for criminal backgrounds. The decision by First Student Inc. to ground its fleet came two days after one of the company's drivers was arrested by Columbus police on a charge of cocaine possession. The driver also had three previous convictions for driving under the influence. Criminal charges may be filed against the bus contractor. Scott Limburg, transportation and food service supervisor at River View Local School District, said the biggest difference between the school bus systems in Columbus and Coshocton County is what drives the people in charge. "When you contract out the work, you're dealing with people who aren't local. We live here, our kids go here, we work here, our friends are here. We know we're responsible for the safety of our children and of our friends' children. When you cut corners, safety is at stake," Limburg said. His district buses about 1,600 students daily. Darrell Lear, transportation supervisor with Zanesville City Schools, said hiring a contract bus company removes a great deal of control over the busing system from the school district and places those decisions into the hands of business people living outside the community. "They decide where the stops will be, how many students per bus and the quality of the buses," Lear said. He said school districts can be tempted into entering into an agreement with outside bus companies because the companies promise to provide busing service cheaper than in-house busing. But as school officials are finding out in Columbus, some busing companies are lax when it comes to hiring safe, qualified drivers to transport children to and from school. Local school districts comply with state standards when it comes to hiring and maintaining qualified school bus drivers, Limburg said. Jennifer Orand, mother of a third-grader at West Lafayette Elementary School, said her daughter enjoys riding the bus. "My daughter has an awesome bus driver," Orand said. Orand, who lives in the northeast portion of Coshocton County, said she was very nervous when her daughter first began riding the bus. "Time kind of takes care of those worries," she said. "Her driver (was a bus driver in the district) when I was a kid." Becoming a qualified bus driver During the initial phase of the school bus driver hiring process, employee candidates must complete a written and a physical examination. Zanesville City Schools District transportation supervisor Darrell Lear said candidates must be at least 18 years old, have a high school diploma or General Equivalency Diploma, pass written and physical examinations and pass a drug test as well as a criminal background check in order to be looked at as a potential employee. "They have to have a Class B CDL and you have to go through the Ohio Pre-Service School Bus Training program offered by the state," said Scott Limburg, of River View Local School District. In addition to that 12 hour training period, potential drivers must also complete a specified amount of on-board training with a certified instructor. All of this is to obtain a school bus passenger certificate endorsement. "You are not allowed to drive bus in this district unless you've met all those requirements," said Tri-Valley School District Transportation Supervisor Rod Ashcraft. "And you've got to keep all of it up to keep driving here." Lear said Zanesville has its own bus mechanics who keep the vehicle fleet in excellent working condition so the more than 2,200 students being transported to and from school are safe. The fleet gets an annual inspection by the state. Each bus driver is required to perform a visual inspection on his or her assigned bus before taking off in the morning. If the driver is unsatisfied with the safety of the bus, they contact one of the garage mechanics and is provided a substitute bus until their vehicle is checked out. "Also, when a driver is coming from another district and applying for work in ours, it's common for (the other district) to send us a reference sheet on that driver, letting us know a little more about that driver and why he's leaving his district," Lear said. That reference sheet, Lear said, prevents one district from shuffling a problematic employee from one place to another. Keeping your bus driver certification Once hired, school bus drivers are subject to random drug screenings. "I've been picked," Darrell Lear of the Zanesville City School District said. "I'm also a certified sub, when we need drivers." Lear said the district will select five drivers at a time to take the drug testing - and substitute drivers are subject to the random screenings. "If they get a speeding ticket or some type of moving violation, they are by law required to notify us," Lear said. If a drug screen comes back positive, the driver is immediately removed from driving duties until the matter is reviewed. If the driver overdoses on drugs or alcohol, that calls for an automatic CDL forfeiture. In addition to the drug screenings, most local districts receive a driver's abstract sheet on each driver. "If you get a DUI and you have a CDL, you automatically lose your CDL, which means you can't drive for us," said Rod Ashcraft, transportation supervisor for the Tri-Valley School District. "If you've been pulled over for something, it should show up on your driver's abstract." Bus drivers must also go through medical tests before getting behind the wheel each year. "At River View, every driver has to have a physical and pass that physical before the school year starts," Scott Limburg of River View Local School District said. In addition, every six years bus drivers must go through the entire certification process again through the Ohio Department of Education. "The Ohio Pre-Service School Bus Training Program takes about 12 hours," Limburg said. "And each year we have in-service time with the drivers to discuss any problems the drivers are having and going through any updates they need to know that have come through the state office." Lear said the bus drivers in the Zanesville City Schools District start out at about $13.56 per hour plus benefits. He said the Columbus district's pay was slightly higher. "We have a driver here with a master's degree in chemistry," Lear said. "Our drivers treat the kids like they're their own. They watch over these children. Sometimes the drivers are the first people the kids see in the day. There's no way we can possibly pay them as much money as they deserve and that's a shame." - --- MAP posted-by: Beth Wehrman