Providence Parents Outraged Over Continued Busing Issues

Kate Nagle, GoLocal Contributor

Providence Parents Outraged Over Continued Busing Issues

Parents in Providence are voicing their frustrations with the city's public school bus service less than a week since school started -- and a full year after bussing issues reached a head in the city in 2013. 

On August 25, GoLocal reported that Providence parent Hollybeth Runco had received a bus assignment for her special needs four year old that would have him on a school bus for over two and a half hours a day, despite living three miles across the city.

Now, other Providence parents are stepping forth to question the amount of time that their children are spending on public school transportation in the current school year.

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"As an active tax paying East Side resident such as yourself I feel that I have a few specific expectations from my city, one of which is that my children get transported to school in a safe, consistent reasonable fashion.  This is the second year in a row where this need has not been met in a remotely satisfying way," wrote Michael Klein, MD, to Mayor Angel Taveras, who Klein said he had "strongly supported" in his mayoral run.  "I will not re-iterate last years fiasco with lost buses and multiple delays and terrible communication, which required hours of meetings from concerned parents (all of whom were also busy professionals and had other things to do with the time)."

"The bottom line is this, my kids start school at 8 am and end school at 2:15.  Their bus picks them up at 6:49 am and drops them off at 3:30 at best," continued Klein. "[Providence Public School Department COO] Bernie Lugar has responded that this is not a problem since it is allowable by city ordinance that children can have bus rides of up to 90 minutes each way."

Historical Perspective

Last year, attention to bussing issues arose when a PPSD school bus got lost in Providence, and parents rallied together both online and in person to demand answers and accountability from the Mayor's office and Providence Public School Department.

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The Facebook Group "Providence Parents Concerned about School Bus and Public School Issues," which began last year, has been filled with concerned parents once again.

"My children Matthew 4th grade and Charlotte 1st grade ride one of the busses that is a ‘bus sharing or combined route’ picking up children at another school then bringing them all home," said parent Kristen King.  "We both work full time and rely on the bus to bring them home! We are on bus #60 which left the school around 2:20, spent 20 minutes picking up children at another school and then arrived around 3:35 to our bus stop with several stops to go! It was hot, long and confusing for the kids as no communication around the route was given to any of us in advance."

King continued, "I spoke to a good friend this morning who has a 4th grader on #64 which had an even worse outcome yesterday under the same system of ‘bus sharing or combined routing'! This child arrived home at 4:10 after the 2:20 dismissal feeling sick, sweaty and tired. I worry we have even more families who are struggling with these issues that we are aware of."

Another parent -- whose children attend the Henry Barnard School at Rhode Island College -- spoke to the nature of this year's bus routes as having an impact on times. 

"Providence makes crazy, non-transparent decisions about bussing.  Routes took a while to iron out last year, and involved the merging of 5 busses to 4.  This year they decided to try to reduce 4 busses to 3, and to couple one of our busses with a Catholic school, St. Augustine, near Henry Barnard.  This would seem logical in some way, except that no one making this change bothered to check on how the two schools' start time stacked up against each other," said parent Kathleen Hughes.  "While the bus route stated that a bus would pick up St. Augustine kids at 2:20, their school day doesn't even finish until 2:40.  In the morning, the route had St. Augustine kids dropped off first, at 7:46 am, when their school starts at 8:25, and Henry Barnard kids dropped at 7:52, when their school starts at 8am.  Frankly, my second grader could've seen this was lousy planning."

Henry Barnard Principal Jeannine Magliocco issued a statement to concerned parents on September 3 outlining how she was working with the Providence school department to revise the routes. 

Looking for Answers

Last year, PPSD said that it hired consultants who were looking at the busing issue to issue recommendations, but a year later, parents questioned the impact of the effort.

"Are these outside consultants coming up with ideas to save the city money, while yet drawing money from the city for these ideas?  And they can't even check on basic things like school starting/finishing times?  Finally, who is checking the work, and where is the accountability? Other districts, like neighboring Pawtucket, have bus routes and regulations posted on their web site," said Hughes.  "If you ask for that in Providence, you are told it is an "external request" that has to go through public records."

Parent Kira Weidner Greene, who last year helped spearhead the effort among parents to address busing issues, sent an inquiry to PPSD's Lugar on September 3 addressing what she and other parents  saw as a number of the unresolved issues from last year.

"Everyone focuses on telling teachers what they need to do better, or how to improve student test scores, yet when are we going to start looking at the Providence Schools administration?" asked Greene. "What about the fact that they approved bus routes that deliver weary or restless students to teachers, after an hour and 1/2 bus ride? Or the fact that when other school districts, such as Pawtucket or Cranston,  post their bus routes and schedules online, parents are sent to the legal department when requesting that same information? 

"Overall, how does poor planning,  from closing down neighborhood programs to wonky school placement procedures and long bus rides, effect the achievement of our students?  Last year's bussing was a fiasco, and we were told they were hiring a consultant to study the issue, " continued Green.  "How much money did tax payers spend and what bussing improvements were actually realized? The school department is asking for accountability every day from teachers, principals and students yet who is managing the shop?"


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