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New Brunswick

6 students dropped off in dark mid-route after mistakenly boarding wrong school bus

The Francophone South School District says it will 'review and improve' school bus training courses after six children from the anglophone school district were mistakenly picked up by a francophone district bus on a rural road near Fredericton on Thursday morning.

Driver was substitute new to the route, school district says

A woman standing outside with three children.
Sylvia Thorpe, with Kassidy, 11, Kallum, 8, and Kaine, 10. The children and three others were briefly stranded in the morning dark after getting on the wrong bus. (Submitted by Sylvia Thorpe)

It was an easy enough mistake, says Fredericton-area mom Sylvia Thorpe.

A fill-in bus driver mistakenly picked up Thorpe's three children and three others along the Wilsey Road in Rusagonis shortly after 7 a.m. Thursday.

"It's very understandable," Thorpe said later in the day. "I mean, mistakes happen. None of us parents were upset that the kids got on the wrong bus."

But what came nextwas inexcusable, she said.

After the error was discovered, the driver left the six children, ranging from grades 3 to 9, in the dark on the side of the road.

"He left them on the side of a road in a subdivision that their morning bus doesn't even normally go on," Thorpe said.

Substitute driver's first time on route

"Two of these kids were in elementary school and I can only imagine how scared they must have been to get on the wrong bus, have a strange bus driver, and then him just ditch them on the side of the road in the dark," she said, adding the area is close to the regionallandfill, and bears are "pretty active right now."

In an effort to see how such a thing could have happened, Thorpe immediately started making phone calls. She was told the driver was a substitute from outside thearea.

Kelly Schriver's nine-year-old son, Owen, was also mistakenly picked up.

She said the initial pickup is understandable given the circumstances. After all, several buses francophone and anglophone pick up students in the area.

The six children were all waiting at their usual stop for an Anglophone West School District bus. Usually, the francophonedistrict bus passes by around the same time as their bus and occasionally, when their bus breaks down, said Schriver, the kids get picked up by a francophonedistrict bus driven by their regular driver.

On Thursday, when the kids got on the francophone bus, Schriver noticed itwasn't nearly as full as it usually is. That's when she noticed it wasn't their regular driver at the wheel.

A man, woman and two children huddled together at the beach, with water and rocks in the background.
Glenn Ivany and Kelly Schriver with their son, Owen, 9, and daughter Ashlynn, 11, who was home sick on Thursday when Owen got caught in school bus confusion. (Submitted by Kelly Schriver)

By this time, however,the bus was already pulling away.

Schriverwasn't really concerned. After all, it was a school bus, so she assumed the children were going to be safely dropped off at their schools eventually.

She was so unconcerned about it that she continued on to work.

"I said, 'They're on a bus, they're gonna get to school. There, it's an easy-peasy mistake."

She never dreamed the driver would just drop them offin the dark farther along the route.

I want to make sure that safety is the number onepriority because that's what they advertise.- Parent Kelly Schriver

On Friday, Francophone South was asked for an interview.Jean-Luc Thriault, the district's director of strategic relations, provided an emailed statement.

"We are aware of the situation, which is unfortunately the result of human error," Thriaultwrote.

"A substitute driver on this route for the first time mistakenly picked up students from the Anglophone West School District."

Thriault said the driver let the students off "at a stop a little further along the ASD-W route."

He said the children were picked up by an anglophone district bus less than 20 minutes later.

"Since buses from several school travel on the same roads, this kind of exceptional situation has unfortunately occurred before," wrote Thriault.

"The safety of the students is a priority for us, and we are truly sorry that this situation has caused stress and anxiety to them and their parents."

Drivers are frequently reminded to be "vigilant and cautious when boarding and disembarking students." he said. "This situation has prompted us to review and improve our training courses."

Parents want to avoid repeat

Schriver said the incident frightened her son, and she wants to ensure it never happens again.

She said the driver had options radio an anglophonebus in the area, calla supervisor, return the students to their original stop, or deliver them to their schools.

Anything other than what he actually did.

"I want to make sure that safety is the number onepriority because that's what they advertise. But there was no protocols followed."

Like Thorpe, she thought of wildlife in the area.

"We have bears around. We have coyotes around. We have creeps around. Anything could happen to those kids."

Not satisfied with district response

Schriver said she's not content with the district's response. She said she wants the driver held accountable.

She said he stopped at the same stop on Friday morning.

"So for me, he didn't learn from his mistake. I don't care if it was two minutes or 20 minutes. No kid should be let off the bus in an unknown-to-them location."

Thorpe isn't satisfied with the district response either.She said the bus driver"failed" the children.

"I am certainly not satisfied with the fact that there is no actual solution atthis time," Thorpe said."What's to say it won't happen again next week with someone else?We know this isn't the first time such incidents have occurred this year.

"So there is no comfort at all at this point. I still feel like we are being blown off more or less."