SBF 70 years logo
MenuMENU
SearchSEARCH

Dispatch from the Distracted Driving Summit

At the national summit last week, North Carolina state pupil transportation director Derek Graham had a realization about the school bus industry’s cause. He describes the experience in this editorial.

September 28, 2010
Dispatch from the Distracted Driving Summit

U.S. Transportation Secretary Ray LaHood hugs FocusDriven founder Jennifer Smith as the Distracted Driving Summit closes. State director Derek Graham attended and saw similarity between FocusDriven and the American School Bus Council.

unknown node
4 min to read


At the Distracted Driving Summit last week, North Carolina state pupil transportation director Derek Graham had a realization about the school bus industry’s cause. He describes the experience in this editorial.

Fellow state director Leon Langley of Maryland and I represented the National Association of State Directors of Pupil Transportation Services (NASDPTS) at the second Distracted Driving Summit, hosted by U.S. Transportation Secretary Ray LaHood on Sept. 21.

Ad Loading...

The focus was the importance of education, legislation and enforcement to limit crash injury and death caused by distracted drivers. We heard from the secretaries of transportation and labor, U.S. senators, Department of Transportation (DOT) agency heads, researchers and the private sector.

Many speakers and panelists likened the situation to where we were with seat belts and drunken driving 20 years ago. Injuries and deaths can be eliminated if we can curtail texting, operating cell phones and engaging in other distractions while driving. It is a no-brainer — just like wearing a seat belt or not driving after drinking. It is the hope of all involved that we will look back after 10 years and say, “I can’t believe we were engaging in such stupid behavior!”

There was not a lot of discussion about distracted driving in the school bus world except to acknowledge that more states have cell phone or texting laws that impact school bus drivers than those with similar laws for the general public.

My takeaway from this meeting ended up being quite a bit different from what I expected. The closing speaker was Jennifer Smith, founder of FocusDriven, a non-profit advocacy group that was born from last year’s summit through her passion to make a difference after her mother was killed in a crash with a distracted driver.

As Smith encouraged the group to work hard to eliminate distracted driving, I was struck by how she was trying to change behavior of the American public. Like MADD, she is promoting a widespread, grassroots effort to change laws and provide education on the safety benefits of “hanging up the phone” while driving.

Ad Loading...

As I listened to her, I couldn’t help but notice the similarity with the American School Bus Council (ASBC). ASBC is a coalition that is working for grassroots support to help educate parents and kids on the value of the yellow school bus. The similarities are many.

Distracted driving is a major problem among teens, partly because they are less safe due to their inexperience in driving — just like those high school kids who are 44 times less safe when driving or riding with another teen.

The experts agree that the message must begin at home. Parents must also understand that talking or texting on a cell phone while driving is dangerous. Until they model that behavior because they really understand, teens won’t take it seriously. The parallel with the school bus message is obvious, isn’t it?

The myriad attendees at the summit were all focused on a problem for which there is a document safety issue. The lives lost due to distracted driving are real and countable and in the thousands. And the people in that room were praising Secretary LaHood for his vision, his passion and the direction he has set for the U.S. DOT to do something about this problem.

This is where our efforts differ. Even though the DOT and Department of Education leadership acknowledge more than ever the merits of our cause and the value of educating parents and students, we will never have the widespread sense of urgency felt by that group at the Distracted Driving Summit. Why? Because our safety record is outstanding, and convincing people that all students should be on school buses is not seen as realistic.

Ad Loading...

Yes, we can argue — with a fair amount of validity — that we need to work on those students who do not ride the bus. And, yes, we have a valid cause and should keep at it.

So what’s the point? What really hit me hard is this: Since we are not going to be able to count on multiple federal agencies and research institutions and advocacy groups to fight this battle for us with the same fervor that they have for eliminating distracted driving, we had better have our own house in order. The American School Bus Council must continue to lead the charge as a lean, mean coalition.

If we are going to achieve something of national proportions — like FocusDriven is planning to do — without the kind of firepower that seat belts, drunken driving or distracted driving command, then we have to do it by being united, determined and passionate.

Are we up for the challenge?

 

More Safety

Promotional graphic for a new Pro-Vision AI camera system. The image shows a monitor displaying camera views with AI object detection overlays, along with multiple cameras and recording hardware. Text reads "New Product," "Pro-Vision," and "Visibly Better." School Bus Fleet logo appears in the lower-right corner.
SafetyJune 11, 2026

Pro-Vision Launches AI-Powered 360° Camera System

The new Birdseye camera delivers real-time AI-based pedestrian and vehicle detections, full visibility around the bus, and telematics integrations.

Read More →
A New York school bus in the street.
Safetyby Elora HaynesJune 9, 2026

NY Coalition Calls for Modernized Transportation for Vulnerable Students

A new statewide coalition is urging New York lawmakers to expand student transportation options for vulnerable students amid ongoing driver shortages.

Read More →
Graphic for an opinion article on illegal school bus passing. A school bus with its stop arm extended is stopped as children cross the street, while a black SUV drives past. Headline reads, “America’s School Bus Blind Spot.” School Bus Fleet branding appears in the corner.
SafetyJune 8, 2026

America Has a School Bus Passing Problem — and Distraction Is Making It Worse

Illegal school bus passing remains a major safety threat as distracted driving rises. This op-ed explores why awareness, enforcement, and stop-arm cameras matter more than ever.

Read More →
Ad Loading...
A black, white, and red graphic with an image of a school bus on a New York street and text reading "Legislative Roundup May 2026."
Safetyby Elora HaynesMay 29, 2026

School Bus Laws to Watch: New York Delays EV Mandate

Plus, federal lawmakers seek new funding for school bus safety as states weigh stop-arm enforcement, disability protections, and education spending.

Read More →
hopskipdrive whitepaper
SponsoredMay 26, 2026

The Essential Handbook for Safe Alternative Student Transportation

Your district's "exception riders" — students with IEPs, those experiencing homelessness, foster care youth — deserve more than a middleman solution. This handbook breaks down exactly what to look for in a supplemental transportation partner: from driver vetting and regulatory compliance to proactive safety technology. Because getting a ride isn't the same as getting a safe one.

Read More →
Emergency response personnel assist participants evacuating through the rear emergency door of a yellow school bus during a hands-on safety training exercise at Prosper ISD. Smoke fills the bus interior as responders demonstrate emergency evacuation procedures.
Safetyby News/Media ReleaseMay 21, 2026

Operation STEER Brings Emergency Response Training to North Texas

Prosper ISD hosted the third annual training for transportation professionals across 67 districts to learn how to respond to emergencies, such as rollovers and evacuations, and proper use of safety equipment.

Read More →
Ad Loading...
BusPatrol cameras on the side of a school bus.
Safetyby Staff and News ReportsMay 6, 2026

Florida District Relaunches BusPatrol School Bus Camera Program With New Safeguards

After being suspended over due process concerns, Miami-Dade schools and law enforcement are restarting the AI-powered stop-arm camera program with new oversight.

Read More →
A group of people in business attire pose for a photo in front of a school bus, with text reading "Legislative Roundup: May 2026."
Safetyby Elora HaynesMay 6, 2026

School Bus Laws To Watch: Seat Belt Bills, Funding Fights & EV Changes

From national bills on seat belts and driver oversight to driver awareness campaigns referencing “Finn’s Rule” and ongoing transportation funding debates in Alaska, here’s the latest in school bus legislation across the U.S.

Read More →
Graphic with part of a school bus and text reading "Fatal Accident in Brooklyn."
Safetyby StaffMay 5, 2026

9-Year-Old Boy Killed by School Bus at Busy Brooklyn Intersection

A Williamsburg community is mourning after a child was fatally struck by a private yeshiva bus, prompting calls for urgent safety improvements at the high-traffic crossing.

Read More →
Ad Loading...
A blue and white graphic with text reading "2026 Safety & Operations Report" with an image of the cover of the report.
Safetyby StaffMay 4, 2026

Does Reliable School Transportation Boost Attendance? EverDriven’s Data Says Yes

The new data shows 99.99% incident-free trips and strong on-time performance, reinforcing how dependable transportation, especially for vulnerable student populations, can help districts combat chronic absenteeism.

Read More →