Prince George school bus routes cancelled after sudden resignation of drivers - Action News
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British Columbia

Prince George school bus routes cancelled after sudden resignation of drivers

Dozens offamilies in Prince George, B.C., were left scrambling for ways to get their kids to class on thefirst day of school after the sudden resignation of multiple school bus drivers.

School District No. 57 says 60 to 80 students were affected by resignation of school bus drivers

Sixty to 80 students in Prince George weren't able to get a school bus Tuesday morning due to what School District 57 described as unforseen staffing issues for the company providing the service. (Ben Nelms/CBC)

Dozens offamilies in Prince George, B.C., were left scrambling for ways to get their kids to class on thefirst day of school after the sudden resignation of multiple school bus drivers.

According to an email sent to parents, several drivers tendered their resignations in the 48 hours leading up to the first day of class Tuesday. Affected schoolsincluded Beaverly Elementary School, Prince George Secondary School, Shas Ti Kelly Road Secondary School, D.P. Todd Secondary School and Heritage Elementary School.

School District 57 Superintendent Cindy Heitman said four routes had to be cancelled, affecting up to 80 students in multiple parts of the city.

"It is disappointing news and not how we envisioned the first day of school," Heitman said.

'Lots of confusion'

The cancellations involve First Student, the company thatprovides school bus services andwas awardedthe school buscontract for Prince George in June.

According to its website, First Studentprovides schooltransportationforK-12 students across North America.

In an email to parents, the company blamed the cancellations, in part, on "theongoing shortage of school bus drivers" across the continent.

"Over the past three months, we have been working to secure drivers for all of School District 57 routes and have been getting close to the number required to deliver service to all families," the email read."Unfortunately, we have had several drivers that had committed to taking routes tender their resignations over the past 48 hours."

When First Student tookover the school bus contractfor Prince George, it touted its newer buses equipped with GPSdevices providing real-time communication in the event of slow arrivals or delays as a key feature.

But several parents say they didn't get notified about the cancellations until early Tuesday morning.

Students at Shas Ti Kelly Road Secondary School were affected by school bus driver shortages on the first day of the new school year. (Andrew Kurjata/CBC)

Shannon Zwiers, who has a daughter in Grade 10, saidshe had to call in late to work Tuesday morning because of the changeand then leave midway through the day to pick her up again.

"The communication has been a little bit all over the place," Zwiers said. "There's a lot of confusion we didn't see a bus this morning, and I didn't have time to make alternative arrangements for school transportation."

Many parents in other parts of Canada have also been disappointed by school bus disruptions, asstudents in northwestern Ontario and Ottawa, for instance, were left to find their own way to school Tuesday due to their own driver shortages.

The school district says it continues to work with First Student to ensure transportation is available to all students registered for school bus service, including adjusting stops on existing bus routes.

With files from Betsy Trumpener and Jason Peters