Alternative School Transportation: Roadmap for Decision-Making For Children with Disabilities and Special Needs
The first Transporting Students with Disabilities and Special Needs Conference and Trade Show (TSD) was held in 1992.
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The first Transporting Students with Disabilities and Special Needs Conference and Trade Show (TSD) was held in 1992.
As a middle-school student in 1980s Philadelphia, Shelley Hunter remembers getting to and from school pretty easily thanks to the city’s public transit service, SEPTA, which had bus and train routes near her home and her school.
Parents are having to take a larger role in getting their children to school over issues with buses, from driver shortages to bullying, leaving many employed caretakers in tough spots.
When Elizabeth Rivera’s phone would ring during the overnight shift, it was usually because the bus didn’t show up again and one of her three kids needed a ride to school.
Ninety-eight percent of school districts across the United States are taking steps to modernize student transportation, according to EverDriven’s newly released Future of Modern Student Transportation and Safety Report.
Yesterday, a new industry association announced its formation, and it’s the first group representing alternative transportation providers.
