The Atlanta Journal-Constitution
DEKALB SCHOOLS’ RESPONSE TO BUS DRIVERS’ SICKOUT
After superintendent’s warning, some drivers say they were fired.
DeKalb County School District Superintendent Steve Green had a stern message for the 400 or so bus drivers who called in sick Thursday: There will be consequences.
Later Thursday, several drivers said they had been fired.
Drivers called in sick Thursday amid worries that their concerns about pay, retirement benefits and overall treatment were not being heard. Many students had long waits before a bus finally came, and some parents complained on social media that some buses didn’t show at all. The delays also prompted the district to readjust its Georgia Milestones testing schedule, having students complete testing next week.
Officials said they were told the sickout could last through Monday.
have willingly put our students in harm’s way,” Green said at a press conference called to address the sickout.
Several drivers said they were notified by a school system representative late Thursday that they had lost their jobs.
“It was not a reason given for termination,” said Melanie Douglas, a driver for 12 years. “He just told me Dr. Green has terminated your job.”
School district officials did not respond to calls for comment.
Transportation managers said 383 of the district’s 908 drivers, including substitutes, called in sick Wednesday night and Thursday morning. According to district numbers, the district serves about 66,500 riders on 899 routes at 17,500 bus stops daily. Green said Thursday that district officials learned of the planned sickout several days ago from drivers who did not plan to participate. Joshua Williams, DeKalb Schools’ chief operating officer, said some bus drivers finished their routes Thursday morning and then covered missing coworkers’ routes. City Schools of Decatur bus drivers also provided assistance picking
up students, he said. A thirdparty vendor is on standby if the sickout grows.
Green said any driver not on the job during the sickout will be required to submit a doctor’s note validating missed time.
As the school day broke Thursday, groups of DeKalb Schools students found themselves waiting at their stops. District officials said buses operated on a delay of up to 90 minutes.
Sheila Bennett, a bus driver representative, said she stayed home because she was feeling under the weather, but agreed district officials could do more for the bus drivers.
In 2015, drivers lined up to voice concerns to school board members after The Atlanta Journal-Constitution reported some buses were so overcrowded that students were forced to stand during the ride. “We’re among the lowest-paid in the district, yet we deliver the most precious cargo of all,” Bennett said then.
Green addressed the shortage then, several months after he arrived at the district, by reconfiguring some routes.
Bennett said Thursday morning about 400 drivers met with district officials Tuesday about a list of demands they have including 6 percent step raises, cost-ofliving increases, bonuses and a committee to investigate adverse actions by school administrations against drivers.
For people to say they weren’t aware of driver concerns is ridiculous, she said. “Yes, you were. It’s just too much and it’s gone on for too many years.”