District struggles to break even with fee-for-service busing
The transportation department for the Colorado school system has signed up only half of the 3,000 student riders needed to break even with the new program. Students must pay $1 per ride. School board officials say if the operation can't meet its obligations for service, they could consider working with bus companies that bid on the service.
FALCON, Colo. — As of last week, Falcon School District 49 has only signed up half the number of student riders needed to break even on its new fee-for-service busing program.
Students must pay $1 per ride this year, and officials are hoping to increase the number of riders from 1,450 to 3,000 before school starts on Aug. 2, The Gazette reports. D-49 Transportation Director Cindy Hardin said 3,000 was the number of students needed for the district to break even on the cost of the service.
“We’re doing everything we can to make people aware of the change,” Hardin told the newspaper, adding that she is concerned that many aren’t aware of the changes spurred by school board decisions in recent months. Information has been sent to all families in the district.
In late April, the school board voted to reinstate the transportation department as a fee-for-service operation with no budget, other than the money needed to transport special-needs students, according to The Gazette. No funding to cover start-up costs was mentioned at the time.
The new operation incorporates a combination of circuit busing and corridor busing to centralize bus stops, and increasing some walk distances and ride times. This allows service to be extended to charter school students. In addition, students of all ages will ride the same bus.
If the transportation department is not able to meet its obligations as a fee-for-service operation, there are other options, such as going back to bus companies that bid on the service, school board Vice President Chris Wright told the newspaper.
More Management
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 →
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 →
Pro-Vision Acquires Convoy Technologies
The deal aims to broaden customer relationships and adds specialized vehicle video capabilities for commercial fleets.
Read More →
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 →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 →
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 →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 →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 →
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 →
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 →



