St. Louis Public Schools Celebrates
40th Anniversary of School Bus Safety Week October 15-21
This Year’s Theme Highlights Pedestrian
Safety for Riders Nationwide School Bus evacuations
Laidlaw is conducting safety classes in schools
St. Louis Missouri – It's National School Bus Safety
Week, and from October 15-21, 2006, St. Louis Public Schools
is joining legislators across Missouri and school bus industry
officials nationwide to highlight the importance of school
bus safety awareness and education.
The theme for School Bus Safety Week 2006, I See the Driver – The
Driver Sees Me, emphasizes the importance and benefits of school
bus driver training and encourages students across the country
to obey school bus safety rules while waiting at the bus stop
and getting on and off the school bus each day.
Celebrated the third week of October each year, School Bus
Safety Week promotes awareness and education on the local and
state level through poster and speech contests, school bus
safety community toolkits and events. School districts throughout
Missouri will be hosting activities for parents, children and
teachers to highlight the importance of school bus safety both
on and off the school bus.
While school bus transportation is the safest form of ground
transportation available –
and eight times safer than traveling to school in a family
vehicle – occasional accidents still happen.
“Loading and unloading children is the most dangerous
aspect of school bus transportation,”
said Clifton Avers, Manager of Transportation
“Too often motorists fail to heed the warning lights
and do not stop for the stopped school bus. By celebrating
School Bus Safety Week throughout our school district, we have
the opportunity to call attention to and to promote a key area
of concern with regard to the safety of our children in an
effort to prevent future injuries or fatalities.”
The American School Bus Council offers the following tips
for school bus riders:
• Be alert to traffic. Check both ways for cars before stepping off the
bus.
• Make eye contact with the bus driver, and wait for the bus driver’s
signal before crossing the street.
• Walk in front of the bus; never walk behind the bus to cross the street.
• While waiting for the bus, stay in a safe place away from the street.
• Before leaving the sidewalk, look for the flashing lights.
• Never go under the bus to retrieve something you’ve dropped.
Additionally, school bus drivers in each jurisdiction are
trained to see the students from different viewing angles and
to count the number of students at each stop.
About School Bus Safety Week
School Bus Safety Week – established in 1966 by the National
Association of Pupil Transportation, National Association of
State Directors of Pupil Transportation Services National School
Transportation Association and supported by the NHTSA –
educates students, parents and the motoring public about the
safety of our nation’s children who transported daily
on yellow school buses. This week also recognizes the hard
work and dedication of school professionals, especially the
school bus drivers who ensure a safe journey for our children
each and every day. For more information about School Bus Safety
Week please visit www.napt.org.
About American School Bus Council
American School Bus Council represents a unified voice of the
school transportation industry, including the public sector,
the private sector and the manufacturing segment – the
more than 450,000 yellow school buses transporting 25 million
children to and from school each day – and is committed
to providing safe, effective, efficient and healthy transportation
for our nation’s schoolchildren. Its members include
National Association for Pupil Transportation (NAPT), National
Association of State Directors of Pupil Transportation Services
(NASDPTS), National School Transportation Association (NSTA),
Bluebird Corp. of Fort Valley, Ga., IC Corporation of Warrenville,
Ill. and Thomas Built Buses of High Point, N.C.
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