SBF 70 years logo
MenuMENU
SearchSEARCH

District combats budget woes by providing transportation for marathon

Employees of the Vail Unified School District participate in a local marathon, and the district is asked to provide transportation for the event's runners. Vail's transportation supervisor discusses with SBF how the district has now participated in two marathons and raised $16,000 for its transportation department.

January 4, 2011
District combats budget woes by providing transportation for marathon

Vail (Ariz.) Unified School District has participated in two marathons and raised $16,000 that is being put toward the district's transportation department.

unknown node
2 min to read


VAIL, Ariz. — When an employee of the Vail Unified School District challenged her peers to participate in a local marathon, 56 of them — including the district's superintendent — showed up to run.

Transportation Supervisor John Nunes offered the district's school buses as a means of transporting the runners; instead, he was asked by marathon officials to provide bus service to all of the marathon's participants. As it turned out, he stumbled upon a way to alleviate the district's budget woes.

Ad Loading...

The district has now participated in two marathons and raised $16,000 that is being put toward the district's transportation department. Nunes told SBF in an interview that this success is due to the Vail district staff's enthusiasm for promoting wellness to students.

"The Vail School District staff is very proactive when it comes to health, wellness and fitness. From the superintendent on down, there are a significant number of people who feel that it's important for the adults to model for the students what a healthy lifestyle is all about," Nunes said.

When Nunes was initially asked to provide transportation for the Mt. Lemmon marathon in October, he was concerned about taking business away from local companies.

"It was a tricky issue for us, in that we're a school district, not a for-profit business," he explained. "I wanted to make sure that we were not taking business away from private companies that could have provided the same service, so I submitted a bid like everybody else and we were the low bid."

Pam Reed, a participant in the Mt. Lemmon marathon and a well-known professional runner, asked the district to provide transportation for the Tucson Marathon, for which she is director. In that event, the district was one of four organizations providing transportation for runners. Thirty-five of the district's buses took runners to the start lines, and another 21 buses provided transportation back to parking lots and hotels at the end of the race.  

Ad Loading...

"My intention originally was just to provide that service for the Vail employees, but we're all dealing with some tough economic times," Nunes said. "We're dealing with budget cuts; we're dealing with the potential for reduction in workforce for the coming school year. Arizona's got one of the toughest state budget crises of any state in the nation right now — it will directly affect education. So it was not a hard decision to make when there's a way that we can bring some additional income into the district."

More Management

Thumbnail graphic for a School Bus Fleet video compilation. A yellow electric school bus serves as the background, with speech bubbles containing words such as “Dynamic,” “Green,” “Critical,” “Complex,” “Family,” and “Underfunded.” A red banner reads, “12 Suppliers. 1 Question. Many Answers.” The video explores how industry suppliers describe the current state of the school bus market.
Managementby Amanda HuggettJune 5, 2026

13 Industry Leaders Describe School Transportation in One Word

What word best describes the school bus industry today? We posed that question to over a dozen manufacturers, resulting in a revealing mix of perspectives on the challenges and opportunities ahead.

Read More →
Leadership update graphic announcing executive appointments at Tyler Technologies. Headshots of Ryan O’Connor, named chief transactions officer, and Franklin Williams, named chief AI officer, appear alongside the Tyler Technologies logo and School Bus Fleet branding.
Managementby News/Media ReleaseJune 5, 2026

Tyler Technologies Adds New AI, Transactions Leadership Roles

Two company executives are promoted to newly created C-suite positions to accelerate the company's long-term growth in both artificial intelligence and payments.

Read More →
An orange and white graphic with Pro-Vision and Convoy Technologies logos, and text reading "Pro-Vision Acquires Convoy Technologies."
Managementby News/Media ReleaseJune 4, 2026

Pro-Vision Acquires Convoy Technologies

The deal aims to broaden customer relationships and adds specialized vehicle video capabilities for commercial fleets.

Read More →
Ad Loading...
A Durham School Services bus with two people posing in front of it.

Durham School Services Maintenance Teams Earn Missouri Fleet Excellence Awards

Eight of the contractor’s school bus fleets achieved a distinction few maintenance teams earn during the state’s rigorous annual inspection program.

Read More →
Joe Annotti of TRC Companies speaks at ACT Expo. A text overlay reads, “School Buses as Money Makers?” highlighting discussion about electrification, vehicle-to-grid technology, and new revenue opportunities for school bus fleets.
Managementby Amanda HuggettJune 3, 2026

How Incentives, AI, and Energy Markets Are Reshaping School Transportation

Sit down with Joe Annotti of TRC Companies to talk district grant funding, utility challenges, AI, and why school buses are evolving from transportation assets into energy assets.

Read More →
A lineup of Beacon Mobility school buses with text reading "Behind the Contracting Shift."
Managementby Elora HaynesJune 3, 2026

Inside the Contracting Shift: What School Transportation Operators Are Seeing Now

School transportation contractors weigh in on recent trends, costs, driver shortages, and the rise of multimodal student transportation.

Read More →
Ad Loading...
Jeff Weiss of ExoAir Systems stands beside a roof-mounted electric air conditioning unit at ACT Expo. Text overlay reads “ExoAir: Cool Bus. No Idling.”
Managementby Amanda HuggettJune 2, 2026

The No-Idling School Bus AC System

Take a peek at ExoAir Systems’ battery-powered cooling solution designed to run for up to 10 hours without the engine on, reducing fuel use and improving comfort for drivers and students.

Read More →
Charlotte Argue of Geotab speaks at ACT Expo, gesturing toward a display of telematics and camera technology. Text overlay reads “Geotab: Data Drives Safety.”
Managementby Amanda HuggettJune 2, 2026

Geotab on Three Major Trends in School Transportation

School bus fleets are becoming more proactive than ever. From AI driver alerts to vehicle-to-grid opportunities, Geotab outlines the biggest technology trends transforming school bus operations.

Read More →
Graphic announcing Gatekeeper contract news featuring a yellow school bus driving along a waterfront roadway, with “New Contract Announcements” text and Gatekeeper branding displayed prominently.
Managementby News/Media ReleaseJune 1, 2026

Gatekeeper Lands Major School Bus Deals as Revenue Surges

The video solutions provider announces contracts with Atlanta Public Schools and other fleet operators as it records quarterly revenue growth and expanding subscription business.

Read More →
Ad Loading...
Graphic promoting “Building a Mentorship Program” with two women shaking hands across a desk, highlighting tips and common mentorship mistakes in school transportation.
ManagementJune 1, 2026

Building Leaders Who Last: Creating a Successful Mentorship Program in Student Transportation

Discover five strategies for building an effective mentorship program to strengthen leadership development and support staff retention.

Read More →