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May 2026

By: STN
photo of a school bus driver in bus
Perspective of a school bus driver from the back of a bus
Photo by Taylor Ekbatani
Cover Design by Kimber Horne

The May issue dives into security and connectivity within student transportation departments. Technology meets training and utilization as incidents of violence onboard the school bus require detailed policies to address. Read articles about AI’s role in routing, how modern technology options can modernize transportation communications, maintenance software to assist the garage side of school bus operations and how safety standards are a joint effort between families and transportation personnel.

Read the full May 2026 issue.

Cover Story

Hands On
Defining policies for school bus drivers when violence occurs on the school bus is only half the story. Video cameras are showing the full picture.

Features

Route Optimization -With or Without AI-
Transportation directors define what optimization means to their operations by using routing software integrated with various AI features.

Beyond the Garage
Maintenance software helps technicians catch even the smallest of school bus defects that can lead to big out – of- service issues.

Special Reports

The Importance of Uniformity
Education is a key piece of ensuring student safety in the Danger Zone, from educating the public on the rules of the road to educating school bus drivers on proper mirror adjustment to ensure visibility. (And don’t forget the kids.)

Conversations
STN EXPO East Photo Spread
Ad Index

Editor’s Take by Ryan Gray
A Purchasing Perfect Storm

Thought Leader by Gaurav Sharda
Modernizing School Transportation Communications

Publisher’s Corner by Tony Corpin
Meeting the Minimum Standards

The post May 2026 appeared first on School Transportation News.

How to Turn School Bus Maintenance into an Operational Advantage

By: STN

Reactive maintenance programs leave K-12 fleets susceptible to breakdowns, compliance gaps and rising costs. This guide gives student transportation directors a framework for shifting from costly “break-fix” repairs to a predictive, data-driven strategy that helps extend bus lifespans, reduce total cost of ownership and make every student journey safer.

Inside, you’ll learn:

  • Why traditional maintenance falls short: Discover how aging fleets and untracked driver behaviors can create maintenance and compliance risks.
  • How to progress from reactive to predictive: Understand the three stages of maintenance maturity and how to reach the predictive phase.
  • What telematics unlocks for your operation: Move past data silos with a solution that brings rich diagnostic data, digital DVIRs, driver behavior monitoring and predictive intelligence together.
  • Five steps to smarter maintenance: From benchmarking KPIs to automating key maintenance processes, turn your service program into a forward-thinking, data-driven one.
  • Download this guide if you’re ready to leave the chaos of reactive service behind and create safer, more efficient student journeys.

Fill out the form below and then check your email to access the guide.

The post How to Turn School Bus Maintenance into an Operational Advantage appeared first on School Transportation News.

How District Turned a Transportation Crisis into a Communication Win

By: STN

When the 2025 school year approached, leaders at Bismarck Public Schools in North Dakota knew they were heading into unfamiliar territory, a local television station reported.

Like districts across the country, Bismarck was grappling with a severe shortage of school bus drivers. Routes were harder to staff, schedules were tighter, and margins for error were shrinking by the day. Something had to change if buses were going to keep rolling—and students were going to get to school safely and on time.

The district made a bold decision: implement a two tier bus system with staggered bell schedules. Elementary and secondary students would ride at different times, allowing each driver to cover more ground and easing the immediate staffing crunch, KX News, a CBS affiliate, reported.

Operationally, the move worked. But almost overnight, a new set of challenges emerged.

Routes became more complex. Timing windows narrowed. Parents had more questions—and fewer easy answers. Calls to the transportation office increased as families struggled to understand where buses were, when they would arrive, and what had changed.

Transportation leaders realized quickly that solving the staffing problem had exposed a communication problem.

Parents didn’t just need reassurance—they needed real time visibility. Drivers needed help navigating increasingly complicated routes. And staff needed a better way to manage information in an environment where every delay was magnified.

That’s when Bismarck turned to Transfinder.

To support the new transportation model, Bismarck Public Schools deployed an integrated technology approach built around the driver app Wayfinder and parent app Stopfinder. Each district bus was equipped with a tablet running Wayfinder, giving drivers reliable, turn by turn navigation—especially critical as routes shifted and expanded. At the same time, Stopfinder connected that live bus data directly to families through a secure parent app.

For parents, the difference was immediate. They could see exactly where a bus was, receive notifications if it was delayed, and get alerts when it entered their customized geofence. For the transportation team, the payoff came in the form of fewer phone calls, better situational awareness, and a noticeable uptick in trust during a period of major change.

Still, Bismarck didn’t treat the rollout as a finish line.

While district owned buses performed smoothly, some contracted buses operated by Harlow’s Bus Service were using older onboard technology, creating occasional inconsistencies. Rather than accept uneven performance, the district took a long view.

For the upcoming school year, Harlow’s buses will also run Wayfinder, bringing the entire fleet—district and contractor—onto a single Transfinder platform.

Transportation Supervisor Jason Schafer describes the shift as a turning point.

“Next year, Harlow’s buses will have something very similar to what we have on our BPS buses,” Schafer told a local television station. “Instead of a third party communicating with the app, they’ll have Wayfinder right on here (the bus). … The reliability of the app on Harlow’s general education side should really be flawless.”

For Schafer, the contrast was already clear. “We’ve had no issues at all with our BPS buses this year,” he added.

As the technology matured, so did the district’s understanding of adoption. About 30 percent of families had activated Stopfinder—a solid start given the scope of operational change happening simultaneously. The remaining challenge wasn’t the platform itself, but helping families fully use it.

Bismarck is pairing its technology investment with stronger parent education to ensure families get the full benefit of real time communication and safety features.

Looking back, what began as a staffing crisis became an opportunity.

Bismarck Public Schools maintained service despite driver shortages, successfully supported a complex two tier schedule, and replaced uncertainty with transparency for families. By unifying fleet technology and focusing on communication, the district turned a headline worthy challenge into a long term operational win.

Bismarck’s story is one many districts will recognize—and one that proves transportation technology isn’t just about routes and buses. It’s about delivering clarity when uncertainty is unavoidable, and confidence when communities need it most.

To learn more about Transfinder’s suite of award-winning solutions, from routing to fleet maintenance, call 800-373-3609 or email solutions@transfinder.com.

The post How District Turned a Transportation Crisis into a Communication Win appeared first on School Transportation News.

Districts Use Alternative Transportation to Support Mckinney-Vento Students

A webinar showed how two school districts went beyond the yellow bus and utilized alternative transportation to serve vulnerable student populations.

Adam Gleicher, director of marketing for webinar sponsor HopSkipDrive and former public schools teacher, opened Thursday’s meeting by saying that the yellow bus is a starting point for most school districts but may not be the complete solution.

“This job is harder today than when I started,” declared Greg Dutton, senior transportation analyst for HopSkipDrive and former director of transportation for Renton School District in Washington.

He referenced HopSkipDrive’s State of School Transportation survey, which found current pressures include school bus driver shortages, tighter budgets, chronic student absenteeism, and growing student populations with specialized needs. Three in five bus routes have less than 50 percent ridership, he explained.

Dutton next reviewed the five main student transportation models and the strengths and weaknesses of each one:

Screenshot

Dutton said that, as a transportation director, he would start by trying to put a student on the yellow bus, then moving to alternative transportation if that didn’t work.

School buses do many things well, but they can’t go everywhere or serve all student needs, he underscored. Rather than a one-size-fits-all approach, he advised a “right vehicle for the right student” mindset, where buses and small vehicles each play a role so no students fall through the gaps and school bus drivers are better utilized.

Safety is the goal, but essential equipment such as booster seats are not guaranteed with transportation brokers or taxis, he noted. He encouraged leveraging multi-modal transportation to match each student with the best-fit vehicle considering turnaround time, in-ride experience and driver qualifications.

“HopSkipDrive was purpose-built for student transportation,” he emphasized.

Screenshot

One area where the company helps close gaps is for students covered under the McKinney-Vento Homeless Assistance Act, Gleicher said.

The population of students experiencing homeless doubled in Sun Prairie Area School District in Wisconsin doubled since COVID-19, explained Claire Bergman, the district’s McKinney-Vento coordinator. She added that the taxis the district was using before its HopSkipDrive partnership often led safety concerns, ever-changing drivers, strained service and a stigma for the students who rode them.

As McKinney-Vento transportation is a federal law, budget can’t be an excuse, she said. She said she was able to assign certain students to separate vehicles to avoid interpersonal conflicts. Parents also have peace of mind, she said, since they know the drivers and can track their child’s ride to and from school.

Gleicher noted that HopSkipDrive’s six-hour turnaround time means rides are secured quickly with same-day or next-day fulfillment. Additionally, vetted CareDrivers are directly onboarded. They have trauma-informed care training and 15 years of caregiving experience on average.

5 Questions to Ask Student Transportation Partners
  1. When a student moves tonight, can you get them to school tomorrow?
  2. Who is actually behind the wheel? What are their qualifications — and how do you know?
  3. Once a ride starts, who is watching to make sure it goes as planned?
  4. Can my team manage and update rides without having to call someone?
  5. Are you licensed in the states where you operate, and are you the provider of record?

Mish-a-lay’ Johnson used HopSkipDrive to transport three students at Falls Church City Public Schools in Virginia and now uses it for 100 students in her current role as director of the office of pupil transportation and fleet management for nearby Alexandria City Public Schools

Like Bergman, Johnson also primarily uses the service to transport an ever-increasing McKinney-Vento student population. She praised the ability to build routes other than home-to-school, such as when a student attends therapy offsite. She can use it on her phone or share access with staff to make faster changes. When a fire temporarily displaced several families, she connected them with HopSkipDrive.

“It’s definitely been helpful for us,” she stated.


Related: (STN Podcast E299) Meeting Needs: Answering Questions on Alternative Student Transportation
Related: As School Bus Production Spikes, So Do Alternative Vehicles?
Related: Alternative School Transportation: Roadmap for Decision-Making For Children with Disabilities and Special Needs
Related: Multi-Modal Transportation Gains Momentum as Districts Seek Flexible, Cost-Effective Solutions


Gleicher reviewed HopSkipDrive’s alternative transportation offerings, which are designed to serve students with IEPs or experiencing homelessness, plus those going to career schools or after-school programs.

Dutton discussed the RouteWise AI routing intelligence and optimization technology, which can be used in addition to a district’s current routing software and lets staff model different cost-cutting solutions to avoid knee-jerk reactions to tightening budgets.

They shared that, with the help of RouteWise AI, Denver Public Schools increased small vehicle efficiency, saving over $500,000 in the 2023–2024 school year.

Dutton confirmed that HopSkipDrive can be a short- or long-term solution, and Gleicher specified that “you only pay for the rides you use.”

When it comes to funding, Bergman advised looking into Title 1 monies, as well as getting creative with state or local grants.

Watch the webinar on demand.

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The post Districts Use Alternative Transportation to Support Mckinney-Vento Students appeared first on School Transportation News.

Former School Bus Driver Sentenced to 16 Years for Sexual Assault

A former New York school bus and Uber driver will serve 16 years in prison for sexually abusing a 12-year-old girl over the course of nearly a year.

Miguel Enrique Diaz, 49, admitted in court that he repeatedly abused the 12–year-old child between December 2022 and October 2023, both inside his personal vehicle and at his home. At the time of the offenses, Diaz was working as both an Uber driver and a school bus driver at the Bay Shore School District.

Hewas sentenced April 24 to 16 years behind bars followed by 15 years of post-release supervision after pleading guilty to first-degree course of sexual conduct against a child, a Class B violent felony, according to Suffolk County District Attorney Raymond A. Tierney.

“This sentence is substantial, but it pales in comparison to the potential lifelong trauma the victim will endure,” Tierney said in a statement. “We hope the strength this young survivor showed in coming forward is the first step in her healing and encourages others to speak out.”

Mother’s Report Led to Investigation of School Bus Driver

The abuse came to light in March 2024, when the victim disclosed the incidents to her mother, who then contacted law enforcement. Following an investigation by the Suffolk County Police Department’s Special Victims Section, Diaz was arrested that same year.

Authorities said the investigation included interviews, evidence collection and coordination with prosecutors from the district attorney’s Child Abuse and Domestic Violence Bureau.

Diaz pleaded guilty March 17. He is expected to serve his sentence in a New York state correctional facility and will also register as a sex offender upon his release.

Officials did not disclose how the former school bus driver encountered the victim but emphasized that the case highlights the importance of vigilance when it comes to individuals in positions of trust, particularly those who work with or around children.


Related: Child Sexual Assault Charge for Colorado School Bus Driver
Related: Former Georgia School Bus Monitor Charged After Alleged Student Assault
Related: Connecticut School Bus Driver Charged After Alleged Failure to Stop Assaults
Related: Former New York School Bus Driver Accused of Assaulting Student

The post Former School Bus Driver Sentenced to 16 Years for Sexual Assault appeared first on School Transportation News.

ARI-hetra to Bring Hydraulic-Free Mobile Column Lifts and Heavy-Duty Maintenance Solutions to the 2026 ACT Expo in Las Vegas

By: STN

SHARONVILLE, Ohio — ARI-hetra, a leading U.S. manufacturer of heavy-duty vehicle maintenance equipment, will be exhibiting at the 2026 ACT Expo, taking place at the Las Vegas Convention Center, May 4-6. Attendees can visit ARI-hetra in the West Hall at Booth #2101 to experience a range of equipment engineered to support the evolving needs of commercial fleets, including those transitioning to alternative and electric powertrains.

At the show, ARI-hetra will showcase its industry-proven Mobile Column Lifts, designed with hydraulic-free ball-screw technology for dependable, low-maintenance lifting. The company will also feature its EV Battery Lift, purpose-built for the safe and precise handling of heavy electric vehicle battery packs, along with the versatile TT-2000 Lift Table and a range of heavy-duty shop equipment designed to enhance safety and efficiency in the shop.

“As fleets continue to adopt new vehicle technologies, the need for reliable, adaptable maintenance equipment has never been greater,” said Bill Gibson, Vice President of Business Development at ARI-hetra. “ACT Expo is an important opportunity for us to connect with fleet operators and service professionals who are navigating that transition. Our solutions are designed to deliver the uptime, flexibility, and dependability they need to keep operations running smoothly.”

ACT Expo is North America’s largest advanced transportation technology event, bringing together fleet operators, OEMs, and industry leaders focused on clean transportation solutions. ARI-hetra’s presence underscores its commitment to supporting fleets across diesel, hybrid, and electric platforms with equipment that meets the demands of modern maintenance environments in heavy-duty fleet operations.

Attendees are encouraged to stop by Booth #2101 in the West Hall to see ARI-hetra equipment up close and speak with product experts about solutions tailored to their operations.

About ARI-HETRA:
For more than 35 years, ARI-hetra has been a leading manufacturer of heavy-duty vehicle maintenance equipment, including ALI-certified mobile column lifts, platform lifts, wheel service solutions, exhaust extraction systems, and shop equipment that’s built to perform and built to last. With a dedicated team of sales and service experts, ARI-hetra delivers the most comprehensive warranty and preventive maintenance programs in the industry. From tailored system designs and professional installation, to direct distribution and responsive in-shop repairs, ARI-hetra supports your operations every step of the way. For more information, visit www.ari-hetra.com.

The post ARI-hetra to Bring Hydraulic-Free Mobile Column Lifts and Heavy-Duty Maintenance Solutions to the 2026 ACT Expo in Las Vegas appeared first on School Transportation News.

When School Transportation is Reliable, Students Show Up: New EverDriven Report Links Safety and Consistency to Stronger Attendance

By: STN

DENVER, Colo. — As school districts nationwide continue to navigate tight budgets, driver shortages, rising safety expectations, and increasing demand for specialized transportation, new data from EverDriven, the leading provider of alternative transportation solutions, highlights a critical but often overlooked factor in student success: getting students to school safely and consistently.

According to EverDriven’s 2026 Safety and Operations Report, 99.99% of more than 2.6 million student trips were completed without an accident, major or minor, demonstrating how a safety-first, reliability-driven model can directly support attendance and learning outcomes.

“Reliable transportation doesn’t happen by chance. It requires the right systems, standards, and accountability at every step,” said Mitch Bowling, CEO of EverDriven. “We’ve built our model to deliver that consistency at scale, combining rigorous driver vetting, real-time visibility, and operational oversight. That’s why 99.99% of trips run without incident, and more than 83% of rides for students with disabilities are served by the same driver—building trust, reducing stress, and helping students arrive ready to learn.”

Reliability Drives Attendance and Stability
The report underscores a growing reality for districts: transportation reliability is directly tied to student attendance and engagement. When students miss rides or face inconsistent service, they are more likely to miss school, contributing to chronic absenteeism, a challenge facing districts across the country.

EverDriven’s model is built to close that gap:
~97% of trips arriving within an acceptable window.
90.36% of trips arriving within five minutes of scheduled drop-off.
83.62% of rides for students with disabilities maintaining the same driver, providing. consistency and comfort.

For students with specialized needs, including those with disabilities or experiencing housing instability, this level of consistency is especially critical. Familiar drivers, structured routines, and trained monitors help students feel safe before they even enter the classroom.

Serving Students with Complex Needs at Scale
From March 1, 2025 through Feb. 28, 2026, EverDriven transported more than 30,000 students across 37 states, including:
16,250 students experiencing housing instability.
10,333 students in special education programs.

These populations often face the greatest barriers to consistent attendance, making reliable transportation a key component of educational access.

“Transportation is the bridge to opportunity. By diversifying our transportation options with trusted partners like EverDriven, we can breathe a sigh of relief knowing that every student, regardless of their situation, has a safe way to get to and from school each and every day,” said Megan Patton, Director of Transportation for Pittsburgh Public Schools.

A Safety Model Built for Students
Unlike traditional rideshare or fragmented transportation models, EverDriven’s approach is purpose-built for student safety, combining:

Multi-layered driver vetting and continuous monitoring.
Specialized training for transporting vulnerable student populations.
Real-time GPS tracking on 100% of rides.
AI-powered in-vehicle cameras in nearly half of vehicles.
This layered approach contributed to zero critical incidents, zero fatalities, and zero incidents of sexual misconduct during the reporting period.

Building Trust with Families and Districts
For caregivers, visibility and reliability are just as important as safety. EverDriven’s technology platform provides real-time ride tracking, driver information and proactive updates, helping families stay informed and confident that their child will arrive safely.

For districts, that trust translates into fewer disruptions, reduced administrative burden, and greater confidence that transportation systems are working as intended.

To read the full 2026 Safety and Operations Report and learn more about EverDriven, visit everdriven.com.

About EverDriven
EverDriven delivers modern student-centered transportation that’s safe, consistent, and built for those who need it most. EverDriven specializes in routing and transporting students across all ranges of needs — from everyday support to the most complex circumstances — including students with disabilities, students experiencing housing instability, and other high-need populations. Serving more than 800 districts across 37 states, the company completed over 2 million successful trips last year. EverDriven’s deeply human, fully compliant, and AI-powered approach helps districts get students on the road in hours, not days, while maintaining consistent, high-trust rides that complement traditional yellow bus fleets. For more information, visit everdriven.com.

The post When School Transportation is Reliable, Students Show Up: New EverDriven Report Links Safety and Consistency to Stronger Attendance appeared first on School Transportation News.

Triz Engineering Introduces New Engineering Model to Address Rising Execution Risk in Commercial Vehicle Development

By: STN

LAS VEGAS, Nev. – As commercial vehicle programs face mounting pressure from electrification, evolving regulatory requirements, and increasing system complexity, Triz Engineering is introducing its New Engineering model at ACT Expo in response to a growing industry shift: the primary risk in vehicle development is not only technology, it is execution.

Commercial vehicle programs don’t fail in design, they fail in launch. As programs become more complex, with multiple propulsion pathways, increasing software integration, and competitive development timelines, the challenge is no longer only selecting the right technology, but executing it successfully at launch.

“Commercial vehicle programs don’t fail because of a single technical issue,” said Dion van Leeve, Vice President of Engineering, Advanced Technology at Triz Engineering. “They fail because of compounding misalignment, decisions made too late, systems not integrated early enough, and execution that isn’t structured to manage complexity from the start.”

Across the industry, this shift is becoming more visible:

Launch delays driven by late-stage performance challenges.

Increasing rework due to early misalignment.

Cost overruns at both program and product levels.

As complexity increases, these factors are driving execution risk, not just technical risk.

New Engineering: A Structured Model for Delivery
Triz Engineering’s New Engineering model is a structured execution model designed to address these challenges at the program level.

The model is built on:

Specialization in commercial vehicle systems, enabling system-level integration and faster decisions.

Full-system ownership from concept through integration, compliance, and production.

Disciplined delivery with clear accountability for cost, timing, and performance.

Right-first-time decision-making grounded in application and production reality.

This replaces fragmented execution with focused delivery, reducing variability, minimizing rework, and protecting launch timelines.

Engineering Certainty: The Outcome
Triz does not sell engineering hours, they sell Engineering Certainty on launch-critical programs through disciplined execution, clear accountability, and right-first-time delivery.

“Technology uncertainty is something every OEM has to manage,” van Leeve added. “What they can control is how their programs are executed. Engineering Certainty is about removing execution risk, so outcomes become predictable, even in highly complex environments.”

Applied Across Launch-Critical Programs
Triz Engineering works with leading commercial vehicle OEMs and specialty vehicle manufacturers across North America, supporting programs in heavy- and medium-duty trucks, fire and emergency vehicles, last-mile delivery platforms, and commercial chassis systems.

These engagements are delivered at vehicle or system level but always with vehicle level understanding, with responsibility from concept through integration, compliance, and release. They reflect Triz Engineering’s ability to deliver predictable outcomes on complex, launch-critical programs.

Reframing the Industry Conversation at ACT Expo
At ACT Expo, Triz Engineering is highlighting the shift from technology-driven risk to execution-driven risk as complexity increases across commercial vehicle programs. Execution discipline, not just engineering capability, is becoming the defining factor in successful vehicle development.

About Triz Engineering:
Triz Engineering Solutions provides engineering to commercial vehicle OEMs, supporting the development, integration, and launch of vehicle systems and platforms. Focused exclusively on the commercial vehicle sector, Triz works across heavy- and medium-duty trucks, delivery and vocational vehicles, bus and coach, fire and emergency, and other specialty and off-highway applications. Triz supports programs at the system level, taking responsibility from concept through integration, compliance, and release. The company delivers Engineering Certainty on launch-critical programs through disciplined execution, clear accountability, and right-first-time delivery. Built with OEM DNA, Triz embeds within governance structures while preserving internal ownership. Its New Engineering model replaces fragmented delivery with focused execution and early, decisive decision-making. The result is predictable delivery, reduced execution risk, and improved product success at launch.

The post Triz Engineering Introduces New Engineering Model to Address Rising Execution Risk in Commercial Vehicle Development appeared first on School Transportation News.

Wisconsin School Bus Driver Retires After 54 Years Behind the Wheel

A long-time school bus driver retired on his birthday, after logging more than more than five decades behind the wheel, marking the end of a career that spanned generations of students, reported WMTV15 News.

Jerry Radke, who started driving in 1973, completed his final route March 3 after 54 years with Reedsburg Area School District.

“I love driving. I’m so used to driving, I feel lost if I’m not driving,” Radke said via the news report.

The Wisconsin school bus driver was reportedly working on his family farm and hauling milk as a truck driver when a school transportation director approached him about the job.

“To be honest with you, I never applied for this job,” Radke said. “He came out to my farm and asked if I’d be interested in a bus route.”

Radke took the position and balanced driving with farm work for years, milking cows each morning before starting his route. Over the decades, he transported thousands of students, including multiple generations of the same families. Some parents said Radke once drove them to school and later drove their children.

“He’s driven them all,” Jessica Oetzman of Loganville told local news reporters.

Radke said, adding that he decided to retire because of his age and concern for student safety.

“Because I’m 87 years old and you just never know what’s going to happen,” he said. “Number one is to keep the kids safe.”

Retired Wisconsin School Bus Driver Found Solace Behind the Wheel

Driving also helped him cope with the personal loss of his wife in 2002. “It satisfied my soul,” Radke said. “If I wouldn’t have kept driving, I wouldn’t be here anymore.”

Students, staff, and community members marked his final day with celebrations. A high school band performed “Happy Birthday,” and residents gathered with signs and balloons along his route. “He is such a wonderful man,” Oetzman said.

The retired Wisconsin school bus drive said he plans to spend more time with family.

“I miss this already,” he said. “It’s going to be very different.”

Written with assistance from AI.


Related: Retired Man Now Drives a School Bus and Sings to Children
Related: Dedicated North Carolina School Bus Driver Retires After 45 years of Service
Related: Atlanta School Bus Driver Retires After 32 Years of Service
Related: Iowa Student Saves Mom with Handwritten Note to School Bus Driver

The post Wisconsin School Bus Driver Retires After 54 Years Behind the Wheel appeared first on School Transportation News.

Life-saving Trio Honored for Life-Saving Actions During School Bus Emergency

The New York State Police recognized three individuals for their swift and life-saving actions during a medical emergency involving a school bus driver earlier this year in Oneida County.

The state police said the emergency unfolded Jan. 5 in the Town of Verona at approximately 12:25 p.m., as a school bus traveled along State Route 365 near the intersection with State Route 31. During the route, the unidentified school bus operator xperienced a severe medical event, creating a dangerous situation for passengers onboard and other motorists.

Dina Johnson, an employee of First Student who was on the bus at the time of the incident, along with bus aide Kately Vasquez and passing motorist Stephen Dillon, were formally honored for their roles in responding to the incident.

Authorities said Johnson acted immediately, taking control of the moving bus and safely bringing it to a stop. Her actions prevented the vehicle from continuing uncontrolled and helped ensure the safety of those on board.

At the same time Vasquez, worked to assess the condition of the incapacitated driver and began coordinating an emergency response. Recognizing the urgency, Johnson flagged down Dillon, who was driving by and stopped to assist.

Dillon and Vasquez then worked together to perform life-saving measures on the bus driver while awaiting first responders. Johnson contacted 911 and remained actively involved in managing the situation until emergency medical personnel arrived and took over care.

State police said the coordinated efforts of Dillon, Vasquez and Johnson were critical in stabilizing the situation and preventing further harm.

Life-saving Trio Recognized for Rapid Response

In recognition of their life-saving actions, the trio were honored by Major Marc A. Barbera, commander of Troop D, along with Capt. Paul T. Kuropatwinski and Lt. Scott T. Kedenburg. Officials said their response demonstrated teamwork, composure, and a strong commitment to public safety.

While authorities did not release an update on the bus driver’s condition, they emphasized that the rapid response by those on scene played a key role in addressing the emergency.

Incidents involving medical emergencies behind the wheel can quickly escalate, particularly when they involve vehicles transporting students. State police noted that the actions taken by Dillon, Vasquez and Johnson highlight the importance of preparedness and quick decision-making in high-pressure situations.

State police said the recognition was intended to honor the individuals’ actions and to emphasize the importance of cooperation and awareness during emergencies. The ceremony concluded with commendations presented to Johnson, Vasquez, and Dillon, recognizing their efforts to protect others during a moment of crisis.


Related: ‘Hero’ Teacher Praised by Parent Florida School Bus Crash Evacuation
Related: Oklahoma Student Hailed Hero After Helping Bus Driver During Medical Emergency
Related: Minnesota School Bus Driver Hailed Hero for Avoiding Head-On Crash With Semi
Related: Georgia School Bus Driver Named “Hidden Hero” After Saving Student’s Life

The post Life-saving Trio Honored for Life-Saving Actions During School Bus Emergency appeared first on School Transportation News.

(Free Webinar) 2026 State of Student Transportation

By: STN

For most student transportation teams, the day-to-day reality is a short-staffed operation managing complex logistics that families depend on. The 2026 State of Student Transportation Report captures exactly that.

In February 2026, Zonar and School Transportation News surveyed 118 transportation professionals across the U.S. The results confirmed what many already know from experience: staffing is stretched, budgets are tight, and the technology teams have isn’t always translating into action.

Join Zonar and a panel of experts for a live walkthrough of the report’s findings. We’ll dig into what the data shows, where the industry is heading, and what it means for your operation this year. Get direct insights from the perspective of providers, districts and consultants.

What we’ll cover:

  • Why 75% of transportation professionals still rank driver hiring and retention as their top challenge and what the long-term data tells us about where this is headed
  • How safety expectations have evolved: parent communication gaps alongside driver behavior compliance tied as the top student safety challenges at 45% each
  • Where technology adoption stands today and why student ridership verification shows the largest gap between current use (41%) and 2026 investment intent
  • Why the data problem is a people and process problem: 48% of respondents cite limited staff as their primary data challenge, not technology gaps
  • Practical recommendations for transportation leaders on where to focus technology investments for the strongest operational return

Brought to you by Zonar

REGISTER BELOW:

 

Featured speakers:

Tony Harris
Director of Transportation
Monongalia County Schools

Tony Harris brings more than two decades of firsthand experience to his role as Transportation Director at Monongalia County Schools in Morgantown, West Virginia. He spent 18 years as a school bus driver in Preston County before moving into administration, navigating mountain roads, narrow lanes, and harsh winter conditions before transitioning to overseeing the operation. Today he manages more than130 drivers across over 100 routes, providing daily transportation for roughly 9,500 students across both urban Morgantown and the rural reaches of the county.
Harris has been an active champion of new transportation technology, including piloting electric buses in the district and developing driver recruitment and training programs to address workforce challenges.

Rachel Trindade
Chief Marketing Officer
Zonar

With more than 25 years in marketing and 15+ years in logistics, Rachel has helped companies drive significant growth faster than industry norms. At Zonar, she leads marketing and demand generation.
Before joining Zonar, Rachel served as CMO at FlavorCloud and Extensiv, and led global marketing at Teletrac Navman (Vontier) across four continents. She holds a BBA from the University of Texas at Austin and has been recognized as a leading Woman in Supply Chain by Supply & Demand Chain Executive and named California’s Most Visionary Tech CMO by CEO Monthly.

Tim Ammon
Owner
Ammon Consulting Group, LLC

Tim Ammon has spent more than 25 years supporting transportation and fleet operations, working with more than 500 organizations across three countries. His work focuses on identifying opportunities to improve operational performance through process improvements, technology adoption, and personnel practices, consistently helping organizations bridge the gap between desired and actual performance.
Tim has also provided extensive professional development services in leadership and management, decision-making, organizational resilience, and cost and technical analysis. He holds a Master of Public Administration from American University and certifications in School Risk Management, Operational Risk Management, and Change Management.

The post (Free Webinar) 2026 State of Student Transportation appeared first on School Transportation News.

School Bus Safety Company Releases Updated OSHA-compliance Training Course

By: STN

The School Bus Safety Company announced today they have just completed the recreation and updating of their OSHA Compliance Training Course for both school bus technicians and drivers.

The OSHA Compliance Course is a single source management tool designed specifically for school bus operations. This course will help managers quickly and easily achieve compliance with OSHA regulations. There are many hazards in a bus workshop and the technicians deserve the required safety training to make their workplace safer.

The course provides education and training materials addressing 26 OSHA standards that apply to maintenance facilities and 3 that apply to drivers. The subjects covered are:

Manager and Employee Introduction
Manager and Supervisor Introduction. Maintenance Employees Introduction to OSHA.

Facility Safety
Emergency Action Plan
Fire Prevention/Response Plans
Signage
Confined Island
Fuel Island
Diesel Exhaust
Electrical Hazards
Spray Painting
Lifts, pits, Jacks and Stands
Rails, Stairs and Ladders
Workplace Security

Personal Safety
Hazardous Materials
Personal Protective Equipment
Emergency Eye Wash
First Aid & Infectious Diseases
Slips, Trips and Falls
Fall Protection
Violence in the Workplace

Equipment Safety
Lockout/Tagout
Machine Guarding
Hand Tools
Forklift and Powered Platform Safety
Welding
Single Piece and Multi-Piece Rim Wheels

“The Process Guide includes action plans and checklists with step-by-step instructions detailing what you must do to be in compliance” said Jeff Cassell, president of The School Bus Safety Company. “Simply put, if you follow all the action plans and document the steps taken, you’ll be in compliance and your technicians will be safer.. It’s that simple.”

“School districts in some states are exempt from complying with federal regulations,” said Cassell.“However, many states have similar rules and the safety of the technicians and drivers in every school bus operation deserve the same high level of safety whether it is required or not. Doing the right thing and protecting your employees should be the standard, not the regulations.”

A hard copy of the course on hard drive or thumb drive is only $2,000 and can be used for many years. For online pricing, call 866 275 7272For more information, please visit the web site at www.schoobussafetyco.com

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(STN Podcast E304) Bus Drivers as First Responders: School Transportation Active Threat Response Training

Safety and training are forefront as the NTSB is investigating a Tennessee school bus crash that killed two teenage girls and an Oregon school bus driver was arrested for allegedly transporting students while intoxicated. Plus, new Clean School Bus program details are incoming, just in time for STN EXPO West in Reno, Nevada this July.

Jim Levine, founder of the School Transportation Active Threat Response Training, or S.T.A.R.T., joins us to discuss how school bus drivers can serve as the first line of defense against threats by interacting kindly with students and becoming trained on response tactics. His team brings its law enforcement, Secret Service, SWAT and School Resource Officer experience to an upcoming 4-hour training at STN EXPO West.

Read more about security.

This episode is brought to you by Transfinder.



Message from School Radio.


Message from RTA.

 

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Cummins Builds on Many Paths Strategy at ACT Expo 

By: STN

COLUMBUS, Ind. – Cummins Inc. (NYSE: CMI) offers its customers a broad portfolio of power solutions pursuing many paths forward to meet its customers’ and the planet’s evolving needs today and in the future. For the 2026 Advanced Clean Transportation (ACT) Expo, the company is showcasing its 2027 X15 along with its L9N and X15N natural gas engines. Accelera by Cummins will feature its next generation Advanced LFP batteries and 14Xe eAxle. In addition, the 2027 X10 and 2027 X15 will be featured in the ride and drive, joined by a hybrid simulation truck.

“Our customers depend on Cummins to provide solutions that are dependable, efficient and cost effective. This reputation is rooted in our technical expertise and deep understanding of their business needs and is supported by our global sales and service network,” said José Samperio, Vice President, North American On-Highway Business, Cummins Inc.

Forever Rising with Cummins 2027 X15
The 2027 X15 will be displayed with its integrated transmission and aftertreatment system, advancing the company’s flagship heavy‑duty platform. Built on more than 25 years of X15 architecture, the 2027 engine incorporates familiar components and updated controls that support improved fuel efficiency with similar diesel exhaust fluid consumption. The engine also anchors the company’s Forever Rising Tour fleet, where customers can evaluate drivability, integration and performance in real‑world operation.

Natural Gas Engines Power a Broader Ecosystem
Cummins also will feature the X15N and L9N engines to demonstrate the breadth of its natural gas portfolio. Built for heavy-duty and linehaul applications, the X15N provides power and performance while offering a practical path to reduced fuel costs and lower emissions. The L9N is suited for regional haul, refuse and municipal operations. Together, the engines give fleets multiple options across mixed duty cycles and varying infrastructure conditions.

Cummins Clean Fuel Technologies (CCFT) will highlight its newest product: an internally designed and manufactured all‑composite Type 4 CNG tank with a fully carbon‑fiber‑wrapped polymer liner. The tank is engineered to be light weight and for integration into CCFT fuel delivery systems for heavy‑duty trucks. The product incorporates technology designed and shared by NPROXX, Cummins’ composite pressure vessel design and manufacturing entity based in Europe.

Advancing Commercial Vehicle Electrification
Accelera by Cummins will showcase its next generation 14Xe eAxle, its most versatile electrified axle solution to date. The 14Xe delivers improved energy efficiency alongside increased torque, power and voltage capability to support both heavy- and medium-duty applications. Available with either a 2- or 3-speed twin countershaft transmission or 2-speed planetary configuration, the 14Xe has the ability to reduce the need for wheel-end reductions while enabling greater system flexibility across vehicle platforms. When paired with Accelera’s ELFA 3 high-power inverter, the system can also enhance functional safety and cybersecurity for 6×4 tandem, medium-duty and school bus applications.

Accelera will also feature its highly modular Advanced LFP battery platform, designed to support flexibility, long service life and fast charging. With 102 kWh of energy capacity and up to 840V, the platform leverages advanced LFP chemistry and cell-to-pack architecture to deliver improved energy density, enhanced safety and a strong cost competitiveness for commercial vehicle applications.

Enhanced Digital Experience for the Life of Your Vehicle
Cummins provides a full suite of digital capabilities that connect customers’ day-to-day operations directly to the service and maintenance experience using real-time data.

These features, available in Connected Solutions or via participating OEM portals, include remote diagnostics, predictive service insights, over-the-air software updates and digital maintenance tools that help minimize downtime, optimize fleet maintenance and ensure that vehicles are operating with the latest technology directly from Cummins.

These features and capabilities are enabled by Acumen, Cummins’ advanced computing hardware, or an OEM telematics device.

Ride and Drive: Customer Ready Demonstration Vehicles
In the ACT Expo Ride & Drive, Cummins will feature two vehicles from its Forever Rising Tour: one equipped with the 2027 X15 and another showcasing the new Cummins X10 mid-bore diesel platform designed for vocational, transit, pickup-and-delivery and regional haul operations. The third vehicle, which has been in service with Walmart since November 2025, is a demonstration of both companies’ commitment to advancing hybrid technology development. As part of this effort, Cummins and Walmart have collaborated in evaluating hybrid powertrain configurations under real world operating conditions using a development vehicle that can simulate multiple hybrid architectures without physical hardware changes. The hybrid simulation truck will be showcased publicly for the first time in the ride and drive.

About the Hybrid Simulation Platform
Cummins and Walmart are jointly testing and refining hybrid configurations using engines, components and controls from both Cummins and its zero-emissions business, Accelera by Cummins. Walmart has been operating the vehicle across a range of routes and duty cycles, validating system controls and accumulating mileage to evaluate performance in day-to-day service.

For more information on Cummins’ broad portfolio and the Forever Rising Tour and upcoming stops, visit this site and meet with experts May 4-7 at ACT Expo Booth #2038.

About Cummins Inc.
Cummins Inc., a global power leader, is committed to powering a more prosperous world. Since 1919, we have delivered innovative solutions that move people, goods and economies forward. Our five business segments—Engine, Components, Distribution, Power Systems and Accelera™ by Cummins—offer a broad portfolio, including advanced diesel, electric and hybrid powertrains; integrated power generation systems; critical components such as aftertreatment, turbochargers, fuel systems, controls, transmissions, axles and brakes; and zero-emissions technologies like battery and electric powertrain systems. With a global footprint, deep technical expertise and an extensive service network, we deliver dependable, cutting-edge solutions tailored to our customers’ needs, supporting them through the energy transition with our Destination Zero strategy. We create value for customers, investors and employees and strengthen communities through our corporate responsibility global priorities: education, equity and environment. Headquartered in Columbus, Indiana, Cummins employs approximately 67,400 people worldwide and earned $2.8 billion on $33.7 billion in sales in 2025. Learn more at www.cummins.com.

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Alcohol Detection Systems in School Buses Among Latest NTSB Recommendations

The National Transportation Safety Board called for alcohol detection systems in all school buses with the release of its final report of a March 2024 school bus crash in Calhoun County, West Virginia, determining a drunk school bus driver caused the incident.

The NTSB stated in the report released April 23 that a 77-passenger, 2022 IC school bus was carrying a driver and 19 students, aged 11 to 18. The crash occurred during the third trip of the day, an activity run, for bus driver Jeffery Allen Brannon, third bus trip. According to video footage from the school bus, Brannon began the run at 5:44 p.m. NTSB stated Brannon arrived at the middle and high school at 5:45 p.m. to pick up students and left the school about 5:47 p.m., after the students boarded the bus.

“About three minutes after the bus left the school, the video footage showed the school bus as it approached a left-hand curve while traveling at a speed of around 42 mph,” the report states, noting the two-lane road has a posted speed limit of 55 mph. “As the [Brannon] executed the curve, the bus departed the right side of the paved roadway. Video from the bus showed that the bus’s speed was 39 mph when it departed the road.”

Upon leaving the road, the bus continued to follow the curve, struck the end of the culvert with its right-front tire, continued south, and then struck a wooden fence. The bus began to yaw counterclockwise as it reentered the roadway. The bus right-rear tire struck the culvert end, and the bus rolled a quarter turn onto its right (loading door) side. The bus came to rest on its right side across both lanes, completely blocking the southbound lane and partially blocking the northbound lane.

Three students were seriously injured, 16 had minor injuries. and Brannon was uninjured.

The NTSB determined the probable cause was Brannon’s alcohol impairment, which led to loss of control, roadway departure and the rollover. Post-crash toxicology tests showed his BAC at 0.161 grams per deciliter about 50 minutes after the crash and 0.127 grams per deciliter about one and a half hours after the crash, NTSB stated in the report.

The 0.161 BAC is over four times the federal limit for commercial drivers.

The agency issued a recommendation to the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration that all new school buses be equipped with a vehicle-integrated alcohol detection system that prevents or limits operation when driver alcohol impairment is detected.

Brannon was found guilty on three counts of DUI, causing serious bodily injury and 16 counts of child neglect creating a risk of serious bodily injury or death. He was sentenced to between 22 years and 110 years in prison.

Drunk School Bus Drivers an Increasing Problem

An NTSB press release states that a Stateline investigation “found that from 2015 through 2019, 118 school bus drivers nationwide were cited or arrested for operating a bus while impaired by alcohol, drugs, or a combination of both.”

School bus industry trainer Dick Fischer collects news article reports about drunk school bus drivers among other safety topics. He said he found 28 instances of school bus drivers arrested for either driving drunk or under the influence of drugs during the 2024-2025 school year. For this school year so far, August through April, Fischer has recorded 20 instances of school bus drivers being impaired.

Meanwhile, the NTSB also “noted that active and passive alcohol detection technologies already exist that can prevent a vehicle from operating if driver alcohol impairment is detected,” the press release adds. “These systems are being used successfully on school buses in parts of Europe as a preventive safety measure.”

It also found that the lack of passenger lap/shoulder seatbelts on the school bus contributed to injury severity. The report noted that unbelted students were thrown into the bus interior and other students. The agency said students struck seats, windows, sidewalls, the roof area, personal items, and other passengers during the rollover sequence. One serious injury ultimately resulted in a lower-leg amputation.

The agency reiterated that properly worn lap/shoulder seatbelts reduce injuries and that policy must go beyond installing belts, but also districts need to enforce usage procedures. It recommends that West Virginia school bus passengers use seatbelts when available and school districts should establish usage procedures with routine audits. Audits should consist of pre-departure driver instruction, periodic belt-use inspections, video review where cameras exist and training for not only administrations and drivers, but parents and students as well.


Related: Alleged Drunk Driving Lands Oregon School Bus Driver in Jail
Related: West Virginia School Bus Driver Faces Sentence After DUI Crash
Related: West Virginia School Bus Driver Accused of DUI, Accepts Guilty Plea
Related: South Carolina School Bus Driver Charged with DUI While Transporting Students


As part of this crash, the NTSB also examined a similar crash that took place in Dale, Texas, where unbelted students were thrown about the interior of a school bus. In March 2024, a concrete truck driven by Jerry Hernandez struck a Hays CISD school bus, killing 5-year-old Ulises Montoya who. The bus, carrying 44 students and 11 adults, was returning from a field trip. Hernandez, who confessed to using drugs and having little sleep, was sentenced to 18 years in prison but became eligible for parole in April 2026.


Related: Truck Driver Admitted Cocaine Use Before Fatal Texas School Bus Crash
Related: Texas School District Adopts Accelerated Seatbelt Plan Following Fatal Bus Crash


NTSB reiterated to West Virginia that it require all new large school buses to be equipped with passenger lap/shoulder belts at all passenger seating positions.

In the report, the NTSB noted that video cameras were important for investigation and support compliance. The school bus involved in the crash had seven cameras, including interior cameras that showed driver actions, passenger movement, vehicle speed and the crash sequence. It found that weather, roadway condition/signage, school bus speed, mechanical condition, driver licensing/training/experience, non-alcohol drugs, distraction from phone/students/loading doors, Calhoun County Board of Education policies, medical condition and fatigue were not causal or contributory factors.

The post Alcohol Detection Systems in School Buses Among Latest NTSB Recommendations appeared first on School Transportation News.

‘Hero’ Teacher Praised by Parent Florida School Bus Crash Evacuation

A parent is calling a kindergarten teacher a hero after he helped children escape a school bus following a crash April 2, near the Jacksonville Zoo, reported News 4 Jax.


Mandy Rubin spoke at a Duval County school board meeting, recounting the moments after a semi-truck rear-ended a bus carrying about 30 San Pablo elementary school students.

Rubin reportedly said teacher Franz Lerch helped keep her son calm and safely freed him from his seat in the chaotic aftermath of the crash.

“Mr. Lerch, in an extreme moment of crisis, was calm and collected, keeping my child calm while he worked to cut him loose from his seat,” Rubin said.

She urged district leaders to formally recognize Lerch, calling his actions selfless and courageous.

“He’s a hero in every sense of that word,” Rubin stated. “I also know that he would not single himself out. I know that any teacher would have acted similarly without thought for themselves. Because, to a public-school teacher, any child is their child.”

Student Injuries Could Have Been Worse Without Hero’s Actions

Her comments reportedly drew applause from those attending the meeting. Duval County Schools Superintendent Dr. Christopher Bernier also addressed the crash during the meeting, acknowledging staff at San Pablo Elementary School. He recognized the school’s assistant principal for stepping in to help lead the campus while the principal went to the hospital following the incident.

Four children were reportedly injured and taken to the hospital, while a fifth person was also transported. Reported injuries include two broken legs, cuts to the head and chest pain. Officials have not released updates on the conditions of those injured.

According to the article, the semi-truck driver told police he saw the bus stopped at railroad tracks and attempted to brake, but said his brakes were not working. The driver reportedly swerved in an attempt to avoid the bus but was unable to prevent the collision.

The investigation into the crash remains ongoing as families and school officials continue to recover from the incident.


Related: New York School Bus Driver Dies After Medical Emergency
Related: Brother and Sister Help Save School Bus Driver During Medical Emergency in Ohio
Related: Massachusetts School Bus Driver Crashes into Trees Due to Medical Emergency
Related: Minnesota Student Radios Help After School Bus Driver Suffer Medical Emergency


Editor’s Note: The article states “cut the seats.” STN inferred the article is relating to seatbelts, especially as Florida law requires the lap restraints. 

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WATCH: Exclusive Leadership Event Summons Transportation Leaders for Networking, Professional Development

The Transportation Director Summit returns to Nevada this summer for a two-day exclusive leadership event designed to empower student transportation leaders.

The training begins Friday, July 10 at the STN EXPO West conference. The first part of the event features a Welcome Networking Reception and Top Challenges Discussion hosted by STN Publisher and President Tony Corpin. To attend, participants are qualified as leading their transportation operations and must fill out a survey on their leading challenges they face. Corpin will facilitate discussion on those points. The participants will be matched with vendor partners who provide technological solutions that could assist with these operational challenges.

The exclusive leadership event continues Saturday morning in scenic South Lake Tahoe for an all-day networking and leadership training experience. Monday’s keynote speaker Bruce Turkel will provide training modules on “All About Them Leadership Lab: Turning Insight Into Action.” During the day, Turkel will discuss how his signature mindset can be used to strengthen communication with team members and align goals, which improve performance and create lasting leadership impact. Turkel’s four-part training includes learning to understand what people truly value, purposely communicating with clarity, building stronger connections through trust, and guiding teams through uncertainty to create successful results.

A Leadership Networking Retreat

The transportation directors will enjoy breakfast and lunch courtesy the vendor partners sponsoring the event. All participants wlll make new connections, engage in targeted discussions that address their specific challenges, and leave with practical applications and strategies to transform their operations. Transportation will be provided Saturday to and from Incline Village.

Applicants for this exclusive leadership event must hold the position of transportation director or a qualified equivalent and be able to attend both days of the Summit. Email for more information about qualifying for the Transportation Director Summit.

The Early Bird Deadline for main conference registration ends June 5, register at stnexpo.com/west. In addition to the Transportation Director Summit, the STN EXPO West conference features educational sessions, a dynamic keynote speaker, hands-on training and unique networking experiences.


Related: Turkel to Uncover Secrets of Communicating Relevance at STN EXPO West
Related: WATCH: Active-threat Response Training Subject of Opening STN EXPO West Session
Related: STN EXPO West Registration Open for 2026, Features Innovative Conference Experience

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Event Resolution at the Speed of Automation

By: STN

Ian stood patiently at the crowded bus stop when he noticed a nearby woman glaring at him. Is she mad at me? he wondered. A moment of unease settled in, but because he didn’t recognize her, he brushed it off as mistaken identity. Soon after, his normal morning took a frightening turn.

The woman’s aggression escalated to physical assault, leaving Ian shaken. His split upper lip and swollen cheek caught the driver’s attention as he boarded the bus, and she immediately pressed the panic button.

What happened to Ian? How and why did he sustain injuries? The busy driver missed the event as she approached the stop, so the transportation director had many questions. Within minutes, he had answers.

The Solution

ARMOR™ Software Suite, an advanced, wireless fleet management tool, and an integrated interior/exterior surveillance system enabled the speedy resolution. Two of the suite’s many features played crucial roles: automated event alerts and automated video downloading. These features could be equally effective at streamlining resolutions for your operation. Read on to learn how.

ARMOR Admin/Actions for automated event alerts.

Automated Event Alerts

Seconds after Ian’s driver pressed the panic button, ARMOR auto-generated an alert and sent it to the transportation director’s cellphone. This alert compelled the director to check ARMOR Live’s high-definition views to assess the situation. The views revealed a distressed, injured Ian, but no other details. How did the director gather relevant information so quickly? He clicked over to ARMOR AutoPilot, an archive for auto-downloaded video clips.

ARMOR AutoPilot to review auto-downloaded video clips.

Automated Video Downloads

During setup, the director configured ARMOR to download video clips automatically, minimizing trips to manually pull hard drives. He also directed ARMOR to add three minutes of pre- and post-event video to clips flagged by the panic button. These actions facilitated his review and response to Ian’s situation. Here’s how: The pre-event video captured the actual assault and the woman responsible. He immediately identified her as the mother of the classmate who Ian allegedly bullied.

Thanks to ARMOR’s automated capabilities, the transportation director quickly obtained proof of the assault to share with administration and law enforcement. Even more, ARMOR helped minimize investigation time and stress for his operation.

Would you like to minimize hard drive retrieval for your team? Save hours on event resolution? Provide wireless access to fleet data and video via internet-connected mobile devices? The safety and time-saving benefits could be transformative for your operation.

Solution requires additional hardware and specific cellular service/data plans. Ask for details.

Let us show you all the ways ARMOR can simplify fleet management.

Contact us, call 800.228.9275 or connect with your sales rep today.

For more REI solutions, visit: radioeng.com.

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Summit School Services Continues Journey Towards a Greener Tomorrow with 600K EV Milestone

By: STN

WARRENVILLE, Ill. – In celebration of Earth Day, Summit School Services is proud to share that its local operating brands, Durham School Services and A&S Transportation, have surpassed 607,000 combined miles driven by their electric school bus fleets – a major step in creating a healthier future for the students and communities they serve. This milestone achievement spans across three locations: Cumberland, Rhode Island and Compton, California for Durham School Services and New Orleans, Louisiana for A&S Transportation.

Durham’s Cumberland location, which serves Blackstone Valley Prep, currently boasts over 277,000 clean miles driven by its fleet of 24 electric school buses, while on the west coast, Compton Unified School District, is just 3,000 miles shy of reaching a 100,000 milestone with its fleet of 25 buses.

A&S Transportation and its two partners, InspireNOLA Charter Schools and New Orleans Charter Science & Mathematics High School, have tracked 233,000 miles total with their fleet of 42 and 9 buses, respectively.

As a premier student transportation provider and strong advocate for sustainability, our Company is pleased to be able to partner with its school district partners for such an important cause that will create positive, lasting impacts that will span across generations.

Later this year and beyond, Summit’s local operating brands and their school district partners in Florida, Michigan, and Massachusetts will join the Company’s journey toward a greener, healthier future with the introduction of their new fleets of electric school buses. An additional 140+ electric school buses are anticipated to be deployed.

“What an extraordinary achievement and milestone by our teams and school district partners,” said Wayne Skinner, Senior Vice President of Fleet, Maintenance, and Procurement, Summit School Services. “It is incredible to see such tremendous, green strides being made towards creating a more sustainable, safe world for our students to live, learn, and grow in. We are lucky to have such forward-thinking, environmentally conscious school district partners with whom we share similar values and ambitions with, and who are just as dedicated to the well-being and safety of students as we are. We’ve only just scratched the surface of this EV journey, and there’s so many more destinations and miles left to drive, so please stay tuned as we continue on this road towards a greener, better tomorrow.”

About Summit School Services:
Summit School Services sets the standard for safe, reliable student transportation across North America. As the parent organization to trusted local operators including Durham School Services, Stock Transportation, and Petermann Bus, Summit supports over 360 school districts. Driven by our five values: Safety, Care, Transparency, Communities, and Culture, we deliver transportation that works consistently, reliably, and without disruption.

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