By SHANNON CAULFIELD
The MarltonĀ Sun
The Evesham Township school board will be looking for bids to purchase new buses or bus contracting services.
The cost of contracting a bus service for will be $2.1 million over fourĀ years.
Currently, the board is spending $3.8 million on the services, including insurance, fuel and salaries.
According to school board president Sandy Student, school buses must be retired and taken off the road after 15Ā years.
Hillman is currently contracted for 30 percent of the bus routes in the district. According to Student, districts need to rebid contracts.
āWe are looking for options, option A is to buy new buses. Option B would be able to contract it out. I wonāt know until we get the information,ā Student said. āIf we donāt look to save money weāre not being responsible.ā
Students, parents and bus drivers raised concerns that the move could lead to more privatization of the busĀ routes.
Parents and students spoke of the kindness of the school districtās bus driversā personal relationships with the students, from asking about their day at school; to making sure theyāre inside their homes safely; to protecting them fromĀ bullies.
Parents found it alarming the district would privatize the bus service, citing ānightmarishā situations involving speeding, forgetting children on the bus and habitual lateness.
āWeāve had a Hillman bus driver for the past few months, and itās been an absolute nightmare,ā said parent Melissa Harrison. āWeāve had bus drivers consistently yell at our kids. They have said āshut upā to my daughter, something we donāt even say to her because to her itās a badĀ word.ā
She lamented the drivers go in circles and are often lost. Additionally, multiple children got off at the wrong stop and the driver arrived up to 25 minutesĀ late.
The board stated it has sent multiple complaints to the company and will follow up with the complaints.
The board will be moving forward with the biddingĀ process.
In other news: a moment of silence was held for the victims of the massacre at Sandy Hook Elementary School.
Additionally, superintendent John Scavelli did a walk-through during a lockdownĀ drill.
āYou could hear a pin drop,ā said Scavelli. āThey did a great job, you couldnāt even tell anyone was in theĀ school.ā
Scavelli mentioned the ability to lock classroom doors was an issue the district is looking toĀ rectify.
Currently, teachers are only able to lock doors from the outside, which presents a problem if an emergency were toĀ occur.