The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Cobb bus driver also tutored kids after school day

Ricardo Irizarry died of COVID-19 complicati­ons.

- By Alia Malik alia.malik@ajc.com

After Ricardo Irizarry finished driving his afternoon routes in a yellow Cobb County school bus, he often returned to Barber Middle School in Acworth to read to students who stayed after for tutoring.

Irizarry died last month of complicati­ons from COVID19, said his daughter, Jessica Heard. He was 73.

“At the end of the day, he gave himself fully to what he believed in, and he believed in all of these children,” said Heard, 33, through tears. “He got up every day because those kids were his big why.”

Irizarry was a Cobb County School District bus driver for almost a decade, a district spokespers­on said.

“Our hearts go out to Ricardo Irizarry’s family and all those who knew him and his dedication to Cobb students,” the school district said in a statement.

Irizarry was hospitaliz­ed Aug. 18, in the third week of school. He was diagnosed with COVID-19 pneumonia, which caused multiple strokes, Heard said. He died Oct. 4 at Douglasvil­le Nursing and Rehabilita­tion Center.

Heard said she believes her father, who was not vaccinated, caught the virus from driving the bus or volunteeri­ng.

“Outside of work, he didn’t go a lot of places, and he was selective of who he surrounded himself with,” Heard said.

Before the school year began, Irizarry talked to Heard about going back to work despite the risks and uncertaint­ies of COVID-19 and the school district’s shifting protocols.

“He died doing what he loved to do,” Heard said. “It was something I believe he felt was worth giving his life to, and that’s a tremendous part of his legacy that we’re very proud of.”

Irizarry lived in Acworth. Besides Heard, he is survived by daughter Sharlene Rogers and another adult daughter who lives in Gwinnett County. He had seven grandchild­ren and five siblings.

Born and raised in the Bronx, he was a devoted New York Yankees fan but thought the Braves deserved to win the World Series once his team was out of the picture, Heard said.

“That would have been something he would have loved to see and he would have celebrated,” she said.

He spent time in his family’s native Puerto Rico before becoming a police officer in Massachuse­tts, his daughter said. He moved around the Northeast and served in the Navy for less than five years, leaving when he broke his leg, Heard said.

He became a truck driver and then a route manager for Waste Management, his daughter said. After earning a commercial driver’s license, he drove buses for Metropolit­an Atlanta Rapid Transit Authority and then Cobb schools, she said. His Chevrolet Impala was his pride and joy, she said.

Irizarry loved to sing, and he played the conga drums at church, Heard said. She believes Cobb transporta­tion supervisor­s assigned him some routes with difficult children because of his background as a police and correction­s officer.

“If anything he said or did failed, he would sing them a song,” she said. “That seemed to change the direction of anyone’s day.”

His peers two years ago nominated him for the school district’s Classified Employee of the Year award. North Cobb High held a moment of silence at a football game the Friday after his death, Heard said. His family is in discussion­s with the school district to create a scholarshi­p in his name, she said.

Government­s are considerin­g calling for pulling the plug on coal power, the single biggest source of man-made greenhouse gas emissions, according to a draft deal under negotiatio­n in U.N. climate talks.

The draft released Wednesday at the talks in Glasgow, Scotland, calls for accelerati­ng “the phasing out of coal and subsidies for fossil fuels,” though it sets no timeline.

The early version of the final document also expresses “alarm and concern” about how much Earth has already warmed and urges countries to cut carbon dioxide emissions by about half by 2030. Pledges so far from government­s don’t add up to that frequently stated goal.

Some nations, especially island states whose very existence is threatened by climate change, warned that the draft didn’t go far enough in requiring action to limit increases in global temperatur­es or in helping poorer countries to pay for adapting to the warming and for losses from it.

 ?? ?? Ricardo Irizarry was a Cobb Schools bus driver for years.
Ricardo Irizarry was a Cobb Schools bus driver for years.

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