The Reporter (Lansdale, PA)

Schools worry bus cuts will strand students

- By Michael Rubinkam

Pennsylvan­ia school districts that plan to start the year off virtually are facing a potentiall­y thorny issue: what to do about bus transporta­tion for students of private and charter schools offering face-to-face instructio­n.

Some districts say they’ll continue to take these students to school, as usual, even though their own campuses are closed. But other districts plan to cancel bus service until their own students return to brick-and-mortar classrooms, potentiall­y stranding the private and charter students they are required by law to transport.

House Majority Leader Kerry Benninghof­f, R-Centre, pressed

state education officials to clarify that school districts should maintain bus service for private and charter students whose schools are reopening for in-person instructio­n.

“Failure to transport children to school for in-person education is an unfair setback to students in an already challengin­g time,” Benninghof­f wrote in a letter to Education Secretary

Pedro Rivera.

Education Department spokespers­on Rick Levis said that officials are reviewing the issue and will release guidance as soon as possible.

Among the member schools of the Pennsylvan­ia Coalition of Public Charter Schools, transporta­tion is “by far their biggest concern going into the new school year,” said Jessica Hickernell, the group’s director of public affairs and policy.

Many brick-and-mortar charter schools in cities and suburbs are planning to hold classes remotely, but those in counties where virus cases are low plan to reopen for classroom instructio­n, she said.

“Our schools are doing all they can to meet the needs of their students during this difficult time and, if the law is not enforced, they will be forced to make some tough decisions regarding transporta­tion,” said Hickernell. “I know

some schools are asking parents to help by transporti­ng their students to and from school, but that is not always feasible.”

Catholic school officials in Pennsylvan­ia said they’re also concerned. There are about 160 Catholic schools with 140,000 students statewide, and most of them plan to bring students back for face-to-face instructio­n.

“Some of our Catholic schools are opening for in-person instructio­n next week and they still haven’t been told if their students will be receiving transporta­tion. There is a good chance districts will refuse to provide transporta­tion to Catholic and nonpublic school students,” said Sean McAleer, director of education at the Pennsylvan­ia Catholic Conference.

At issue is school districts’ differing legal interpreta­tions of the Pennsylvan­ia School Code. The law generally requires districts offering bus service to transport students of private

schools within 10 miles of district boundaries. The Education Department has said that districts are on the hook to transport privatesch­ool students even when public schools are closed, unless it’s because of bad weather.

But when a school district holds classes virtually during the COVID-19 pandemic — and thus doesn’t bring its students to school — it could be argued that it doesn’t have to offer bus service to privatesch­ool students. That’s because the school code mandates “identical provision” of transporta­tion to public and private schools, the Pennsylvan­ia Associatio­n of School Business Officials said in a legal analysis sent to school districts.

The rules are different for public charter schools, the analysis noted, and districts opening remotely this fall will likely have to bus students who go to charters that are offering classroom instructio­n.

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