Chicago Sun-Times

Parents of young magnet students say losing busing is a ‘crushing crisis’

- BY NADER ISSA, EDUCATION REPORTER nissa@suntimes.com | @NaderDIssa

After a bus driver shortage left thousands of special education and homeless students on extremely long bus routes or entirely without transporta­tion for months last school year, Chicago Public Schools officials decided to prioritize those kids moving forward.

Those children are legally entitled to transporta­tion and are among the most vulnerable students, often with the most difficulty getting to their schools.

But the hiring difficulti­es and busing problems remain this fall. And some parents are upset about the knock-on effect of the new prioritiza­tion: CPS doesn’t have enough drivers to bus any general education students to selective enrollment and magnet schools.

Those programs are often the most sought-out alternativ­es for families uninterest­ed in their neighborho­od school. But that of course usually means a longer commute. So acceptance into those programs has often come with a busing option. And that can especially be helpful for working-class families from Black and Latino communitie­s whose children are highachiev­ing but whose neighborho­od schools are underfunde­d.

But CPS officials said this month that they still had not caught up with the bus driver shortage despite increasing driver wages and hosting several job fairs. That left thousands of students — CPS hasn’t said the exact number — without busing. General education students — and one accompanyi­ng adult — are instead eligible for free CTA passes.

Several parents let out their frustratio­n at Thursday’s monthly Board of Education meeting.

Josh Anderson, whose daughter is in kindergart­en at Edison Elementary, said it was a “shock” to find out a couple weeks before school started that she wouldn’t have a bus.

“Transporta­tion was promised to our children when they were offered spots at these schools,” Anderson told the board. “Families depend on you. Your offered CTA bus passes are not a solution for elementary school kids.”

Anderson said he understand­s prioritizi­ng homeless and special education students.

“At the same time, with transporta­tion eliminated, selective enrollment schools become accessible only to families that can afford,” he said. “You need to make these schools easier to attend for these families.”

Parent Jessica Driscoll said the “unilateral decision has manufactur­ed a crushing crisis for parents and caregivers citywide.” She claimed CPS has more drivers yet is serving fewer students.

LaShanda Flowers, a parent at Hawthorne Elementary, said she and others “work too hard to add another struggle to our plate.”

“There is no feasible solution offered to us,” Flowers said.

“The CTA bus passes do nothing for our children. Common sense tells you that you cannot put a 5-year-old, an 8-year-old and a 9-year-old alone on the CTA bus for 30 minutes to school and a 30-minute ride from school.”

There’s no doubt the district’s plan has worked as intended to help special education students — even though problems still exist even for those kids.

Last year there were 3,000 kids on routes over 60 minutes, “which was troubling,” officials said. This year that’s down to 47 students, most of whom have routes between 61 and 66 minutes long. The average student’s bus ride is now 28 minutes.

New transporta­tion requests continue to come in from special education and homeless students, and CPS’ goal is to get those kids routed within two weeks, official said.

“I’m super sensitive to the transporta­tion issues,” CPS chief operating officer Charles Mayfield said. “I do understand how it impacts families in the selective-enrollment and magnet programs.

“This was a tough decision that we all needed to make in regards to transporti­ng our most vulnerable population.”

 ?? PAT NABONG/SUN-TIMES ?? CPS has worked to fix transporta­tion problems for kids who need it most. And that has left parents at selective enrollment and magnet programs frustrated.
PAT NABONG/SUN-TIMES CPS has worked to fix transporta­tion problems for kids who need it most. And that has left parents at selective enrollment and magnet programs frustrated.

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