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View Full Version : Bus driver incident last week.



ZR
02-25-2017, 10:12 AM
So not one mention of a parent assuring the school their child would not be involved in that kind of ridiculous behavior in the future. Lil wonder kids had zero, nada, no respect for authority. Parents demanding the driver be removed only adds to their kids warped interpretation of whats right or wrong.
On that same subject, still floors me seeing kids bussed from such short distances to schools these days and the insane strain it puts on school budgets. WTF happened to getting your own kids to school and or once old enough why are they not walking there themselves?? The number of school buses buzzing around this area each and every morning is a bad joke.

Parents in Brampton are calling for a school bus driver to be removed from their children’s route after students were dropped at home more than an hour late last week.
Fifty students ranging from JK to Grade 8 from Mount Royal Public School in Brampton were being driven home on Feb. 15 when the bus pulled over during the trip.
“The bus driver pulled over to the side of the road when she felt it was unsafe to proceed given that the students on the bus were loud and disruptive,” Peel Region District School Board spokeswoman Carla Pereira told Global News.
READ MORE: Ontario ombudsman reviews Toronto school bus delays (http://globalnews.ca/news/2965981/ontario-ombudsman-reviews-toronto-school-bus-delays/)
“What she did was just wait on the bus for approximately twenty minutes to see if the students were quieting down.”
When they didn’t, the school board said the bus returned to the school where the vice principal told the kids to settle down.
“At that point, the bus driver did finish the route,” Pereira said.
READ MORE: ‘Where’s My Bus?’ GPS system lets parents track school buses (http://globalnews.ca/news/1544613/wheres-my-bus-gps-system-lets-parents-track-school-buses/)
The school bus route is only three kilometres long and normally takes only minutes to drive.
For parents left waiting at the bus stop, it was a stressful hour waiting for their children. The school board said it sent a message to parents about the delay, but not everyone got the message.
Jashanmeet Dhillon’s five-year-old son was one of the kids on the bus. She said her son was hungry and afraid when the bus finally brought him home.
“He was crying, he was really crying badly,” Dhillon said.

Daljit Beniwal’s children, who are seven and eight years old, were also in tears and didn’t want to ride the bus anymore.
“When they came off, they were hugging me saying, ‘Mom, I never want to go back to school, I don’t want to take this bus,” Beniwal said.
“I don’t feel my kids are safe.”
READ MORE: How Canadian schools are fighting bullying on the bus (http://globalnews.ca/news/1328716/how-canadian-schools-are-fighting-bullying-on-the-bus/)
Chris Harwood, president of Parkview Transit, told Global News in a statement the company conducted a “complete” investigation and cleared the driver.
“We have concluded that our driver did exactly the right thing for the safety of the students under her care. The level of misbehavior on the bus was severe enough that our driver had to stop the bus and then return to the school, in compliance with our safety protocols,” Harwood wrote.
“These guidelines are in place to enhance student safety by avoiding the risk of distracted driving. We apologize to the parents of the children who were inconvenienced by this delay. The safety of our passengers, employees and the community is our first and most important priority.”

83 5.0
02-25-2017, 10:24 AM
Funny how the focus is on the bus drivers actions and not the sh-- disturbers on the bus.
They get paid barely minimum wage to transport the kids and this is the crap they have to put up with.

RedSN
02-25-2017, 10:34 AM
I can only imagine how loud and unruly those kids must have been.


She said her son was hungry and afraid when the bus finally brought him home.
Ok, the part about being afraid I can understand. But the kid was hungry? Did they run out of in-flight snacks?

55 HD
02-25-2017, 11:21 AM
I agree, NO mention of how they (school OR parents) will enforce the kids to be quite or have normal conversations without distracting the driver, which is very unsafe to be operating and bus full of noisy kids. When a driver is operating a bus with passengers on board it is the drivers responsibility to make sure all passengers are seated and safe while the bus is in motion. Having said that, when the driver of the bus hears a commotion going on in the bus they are to look in the rear view mirror which has they distracted from the road ahead while in motion.........I bet the drivers eyes were looking in the mirror more than on the road ahead.

Good on bus driver for protecting the safety of the kids under the situation which is described to be kids acting up and very loud.

Kids see adults screaming all the time during protest events so they are learning well nowadays. I never remember seeing a protest in Ontario like we do in this day and age.

Snaketamer
02-25-2017, 01:37 PM
Talk about 'Throwing the driver under the bus'...

allicedout
02-25-2017, 06:38 PM
If that were me on that bus as a student and my dad found out the bus returned because we were making that much noise........ Well let's just say I'd be the quieted kid on the bus after that night.

Redfire427
02-25-2017, 08:52 PM
My wife was a school bus driver for 13 years, until she had had enough. Situations like the above were almost a daily routine. The driver followed the schoolboard rules and returned to the school. The crap that goes on on the buses is crazy. My wife said the youngsters are just as bad as the teenagers. Courtesy and respect are a thing of the past.

Carmen

92redragtop
02-26-2017, 12:56 AM
If that were me on that bus as a student and my dad found out the bus returned because we were making that much noise........ Well let's just say I'd be the quieted kid on the bus after that night.

Yup, it's not kids seeing adults protesting that's causing this behaviour - it's the lack of discipline in their upbringing at home.