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Busing not expected to change much

photo
[Times photo: Michael Rondou]
School buses move out of the district’s terminal on 49th Street S in this time exposure taken before dawn. For the first time next year, busing will be provided for students attending fundamental schools.

By SHARON L. BOND, Neighborhood Times Business Editor
© St. Petersburg Times
published September 15, 2002


During the first year of the choice plan, walks to bus stops might be longer but bus rides won't be.

Bus transportation under the first year of controlled choice might be a lot like this year.

That is the school district's expectation, although transportation officials won't know for sure until parents' choices are in. Based on a survey of parents' preferences, the county thinks change will be minimal.

Terry Palmer, director of transportation for the Pinellas County school system, said the main change under choice will be that some buses will deliver students to two schools rather than one.

"We won't have high school, middle school and elementary school students on the same bus," Palmer said.

Mixing ages is a concern for many parents.

The length of bus rides should be about the same. A maximum of 50 minutes applies to elementary students and no more than an hour for secondary students. As is the case now, no transportation will provided to students who live within 2 miles of school.

Students attending magnet schools will be able to catch a bus after going to a stop on a main artery, Palmer said, the same as this year.

Bus transportation is not provided for students with special attendance permits, but they will be allowed to catch a bus from a stop in the area where their chosen school is if a seat is available.

For the first time next year, busing will be provided for students attending fundamental schools. Palmer said he had asked principals at fundamental schools to find out which parents want transportation.

Walks to bus stops will be longer. But the distances won't come anywhere near the 1.5-mile walk the county could require. Palmer said the optimum walk for an elementary and middle school students should be no more than 0.35 of a mile. Now the maximum is a fifth of a mile for elementary students and a quarter mile for middle school students. High school students will have a maximum walk of 0.45 of a mile, up from 0.27 of a mile.

Because racial ratios will remain in place for the first four years of controlled choice, some busing might be needed to maintain the required percentages, Palmer said.

School Search 2003
  • Private school listing
  • Dressing up schools to attract parents' tastes
  • Bus service a first for fundamental schools
  • Controlled choice: question and answers
  • One zone, many choices
  • Middle schools tout themes to attract students
  • Special interests, needs met at charter schools
  • Education centers guide students toward vocations
  • Some parents handle the teaching
  • Magnet schools offer specialized education
  • 'Choice' schools are big part of new landscape
  • MEGSSS students to get more choice
  • 4 partnership schools offer another choice
  • Busing not expected to change much
  • Kids with disabilities may opt for vouchers
  • 'Career academies' target vocations
  • Not all waiting lists work the same
  • Elementary parents get more to choose from
  • How are schools graded?
  • Save these dates
  • Different programs are heart of choice
  • Preferences add further intricacies to application
  • Another choice option: private school
  • Requests for special attendance permits are expected to plunge
  • Administrators analyze special education locations, needs
  • Preparation can make shopping for school a cinch
  • Understanding the chart
  • This year, you must choose
  • Here's how to get started
  • For one mother, it's location, location
  • Choice plan presents challenges for parents
  • Current students have edge in choice plan
  • After Dec. 13, choices narrow
  • Choice adds confusion to newness
  • Each decision is a piece of data
  • A magnet application's journey
  • Computer program to help schools reduce crowding
  • If not Clearwater, then maybe it'll be Palm Harbor, or even Largo
  • After studying options, family waits for lottery
  • The calm before the storm
  • More to decision than A, B, C, D, F
  • Considering schools in the works? Look to principals
  • 3 new south Pinellas schools to feature special programs
  • Frustration mounts over need to choose at all
  • Didn't get first choice? Other options await
  • Choosing right school means investing time
  • Next step: finding out if you made right choice
  • Special-needs students await word on programs
  • Public schools may offer family more
  • Student sets sights on military
  • Family finds flexibility in homeschooling
  • Elementary schools list
  • Middle Schools list
  • High schools list
  • Bus service a first for fundamental schools
  • A straight answer is their top choice
  • A parent's painful choice
  • Seeking a 'friendly feeling'

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