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School & District Management

Schools Don鈥檛 Have Enough Bus Drivers to Start the School Year鈥擜gain

By Mark Lieberman 鈥 August 15, 2024 6 min read
School buses sit in a lot on Feb. 6, 2024, in Virginia Beach, Va.
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Before the pandemic, roughly 70,000 students rode 800 buses to public school buildings in Orange County, Fla.

But as of the first few weeks of this school year, the number of students riding the bus has dropped to 53,000 riding 500 buses.

What鈥檚 to blame for such a sharp drop in ridership and buses on the road? 鈥淚t鈥檚 not because we鈥檝e gotten more inefficient,鈥 said Bill Wen, the Orange County school district鈥檚 senior director of transportation services.

It鈥檚 also not because the number of students eligible for legally mandated transportation to and from school has changed. That figure has hovered around 90,000 students for the last several years.

The culprit, in Orange County and across America, is a shortage of drivers for those buses. Four years after the pandemic scrambled the country鈥檚 labor market and threw school systems into unprecedented chaos, many districts are still struggling to fill open bus driver positions.

That means longer wait times for students to get to and from school, fewer options for families with limited time and resources, and bigger headaches for administrators allocating resources and puzzling out routes. There鈥檚 even some evidence that bus driver shortages contribute to chronic absenteeism, which soared during the pandemic and has yet to retreat to pre-pandemic levels.

The Columbus schools in Ohio earlier this month were . The Paradise Valley school district just outside Phoenix has . And the statewide school system in Hawaii and promised reimbursement for families who drive students to and from some schools.

Districts in , , , , , and have recently reported bus driver shortages as well.

Pandemic-era shortages are sticking around

HopSkipDrive, a private company that offers paid rideshare services to students in districts nationwide, 400 district leaders and school transportation workers, including bus drivers and mechanics, from across the country. More than 90 percent of them said their district has a shortage of bus drivers that is 鈥渟everely鈥 or 鈥渟omewhat鈥 constraining their operations.

Sixty percent of school leaders said they鈥檝e had to cut routes this year because of shortages. Forty-five percent have bumped up pay or expanded benefits for drivers. And more than 1 in 4 school leaders told HopSkipDrive they鈥檝e hired contractors to supplement bus service they can鈥檛 provide on their own.

In Orange County, Wen has watched as the average age of his bus driver team has crept upward to nearly 60 since the pandemic began. Most of the remaining drivers retired from another profession, and many relocated recently from northern states in search of warmer weather.

But the area, which includes Orlando, is rife with industries that can offer higher salaries for similar skills: theme parks, hotels and resorts, local transit authorities, motor coaches, and massive corporations like Amazon.

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Photograph of a school bus driving down a road surrounded by fall foliage
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Plus, in Florida and elsewhere, driving a school bus can be grueling and thankless. The schedule is disjointed, with hours in the early morning and late afternoon and a long break in the middle.

鈥淚t鈥檚 a different lifestyle,鈥 said Wen, who also serves as executive director of the Florida Pupil Transportation Association. 鈥淪ome people just aren鈥檛 attuned to it.鈥

Districts have had to make creative and sometimes unpopular adjustments to fit operations within the constraints of their transportation staffing.

Buses in Orange County now make two trips to each school building every morning and afternoon, with the same driver transporting two busloads of students. That means some staffers have to arrive at work earlier to greet students when they arrive or leave work later to wait for the last ones to leave.

Administrators have encouraged parents who have the means to drop off their kids at school and urged students who can drive themselves to do so, freeing up more seats on buses for students who have no other option. But the increase in car traffic has led to backups that make everyone later and more frustrated.

鈥淚t鈥檚 not ideal, this current situation,鈥 Wen said. 鈥淏ut it鈥檚 what we have until we鈥檙e able to figure out that magic wand for everyone to get enough drivers.鈥

Districts are searching for solutions and hoping more candidates emerge

Staff shortages at schools are rarely uniform across the nation鈥檚 50 states, 13,000 public school districts, and 100,000 school buildings.

This upcoming school year is the first one since the pandemic began with no shortage of drivers in Baltimore County, Md., said Ron Prettyman, who owns Whitcraft Services, a private school bus contractor that serves the county鈥檚 schools.

鈥淲e鈥檙e probably turning away applicants at this point, which is a little scary, because usually when a lot of people start applying to drive a bus, in my experience there鈥檚 usually a downturn in the economy,鈥 he said.

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Randal Lutz, superintendent of Baldwin-Whitehall school district near Pittsburgh and a soon-to-be certified school bus driver, climbs aboard a bus prior to dismissal.
Randal Lutz, superintendent of Baldwin-Whitehall School District in Pittsburgh and soon-to-be certified school bus driver, climbs aboard a bus prior to dismissal.
Photo courtesy of Randal Lutz

Prettyman has made a point when talking to candidates of highlighting the positive experience that driving a school bus can be. He started driving one of his company鈥檚 buses himself when staffing got particularly tight when schools reopened in the fall of 2020.

鈥淣ow I鈥檓 able to talk from experience to an applicant. I鈥檓 not just saying, 鈥業t鈥檚 a great job,鈥 but I鈥檓 saying, 鈥楬ey, I do that every day. It鈥檚 an actually enjoyable part of my day.鈥欌

Still, that sentiment doesn鈥檛 ring true for everyone. Roughly 30 miles east of Prettyman鈥檚 district, higher wages haven鈥檛 eliminated the driver shortage in Harford County, Md., said Steve Nelson, owner of Nelson Bus Company, the Harford County contractor. This year, his company is three drivers short for the 24 buses it supplies to the local schools.

The biggest challenge for his drivers is 鈥渢he deterioration of the student discipline,鈥 said Nelson, who also serves as president of the Maryland School Bus Contractors Association. 鈥淧eople just don鈥檛 want to deal with the kids.鈥

States have made some policy changes in recent years to help address shortages: making required physical examinations for bus driver licenses less frequent, allowing retired bus drivers to serve as substitutes in high-need areas, and giving permission for school board members to volunteer to fill in.

In Orange County, Wen鈥檚 team has invested in a digital system that equips every student with an ID card and allows the district to store information about every student who swipes in and rides a bus. That tool will help ensure that the district submits precise counts of student ridership to the state, which uses ridership numbers to determine transportation funding.

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Illustration of man and african american woman using binoculars and sitting on a search bar from internet.
iStock/Getty

Meanwhile, the district has extra money left over from its current allocation of transportation funding because some of the positions it was meant to fund haven鈥檛 been filled. Wen and his team are using those funds to offer a suite of incentives: $2,000 signing bonuses for new hires, plus extra bonuses for drivers who show up to work every day, drivers who don鈥檛 incur any traffic violations or have other preventable accidents while on the job, and drivers who take on extra work to fill in for others who are out.

All told, drivers can rack up $11,000 in bonuses鈥攆or now. Wen isn鈥檛 sure what he鈥檒l do about those incentives if the shortage abates.

鈥淎s we get closer to being full, we鈥檒l have to look at, how do we fund the incentives?鈥 he said.

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