SchoolBus logo in red and orange
MenuMENU
SearchSEARCH

Ellison Addresses ABA’s Questions About ‘Yellow Charter’ Buses

Following the motorcoach association’s response to an SBF article, Chris Ellison of Eugene School District clarifies details about the district’s charter-style school buses.

June 14, 2017
Ellison Addresses ABA’s Questions About ‘Yellow Charter’ Buses

Following a motorcoach association’s response to an SBF article, Chris Ellison of Eugene School District clarifies details about the district’s charter-style school buses.

4 min to read


Following a motorcoach association’s response to an SBF article, Chris Ellison of Eugene School District clarifies details about the district’s charter-style school buses.

Editor’s note: The American Bus Association (ABA), a trade group for motorcoach and tour operators, recently issued a response to the School Bus Fleet June 2017 article “Oregon District Shuns Motorcoaches, Runs ‘Yellow Charters.'" ABA President and CEO Peter Pantuso raised several questions about Eugene School District’s charter-style school buses that are described in the article. Here, Chris Ellison, the district’s transportation manager, responds to the ABA to clarify details about the buses.

June 14, 2017

Ad Loading...

Dear Mr. Pantuso,

I appreciate your response to Thomas McMahon’s article featured in the June 2017 issue of School Bus Fleet magazine, “Oregon District Shuns Motorcoaches, Runs ‘Yellow Charters.’” However, there are many inaccuracies in your response, and I must take this opportunity to clarify these inaccuracies to be sure readers and other industry professionals are fully and accurately informed.

These “refurbished” buses that you speak of are, in fact, not refurbished. Nowhere in the article does it state that I took an existing bus and refurbished it with updated charter-style equipment. These buses were purpose-built at the factory by the manufacturer. In fact, all three major school bus manufacturers (Blue Bird, Thomas Built, and International) offer this “upfit” for their customers. This is no different than ordering leather for your seats. It is simply an option that has been vetted through rigorous federally-mandated safety testing.

As one of the most federally-regulated vehicles on the road, all equipment installed on school buses must pass FMVSS standards. If it does not, it simply cannot be installed and used.

You mention that school bus seats are designed for compartmentalization. You are correct. With these charter-style activity seats, they still provide compartmentalization, as they do not recline. Reclining seats are not allowed on school buses due to the loss of this compartmentalization. Again, these seats meet all FMVSS regulations.

Ad Loading...

Seat belts are currently a hot national topic in the pupil transportation industry. The fact is that unless local or state administrative rules require three-point lap/shoulder belts, they are not federally required on large school buses. My personal opinion is that it is a matter of time before all school buses are required to have three-point lap/shoulder belts, as more states are writing this requirement into rule. Oregon currently does not have this requirement.

You mention the addition of interior luggage racks and infer that this addition may compromise the roof/rollover crush standard. This again is false, as interior luggage racks have no relation to the roof/rollover crush standard on school buses. Interior luggage racks are allowed in many forms on school buses. However, Oregon’s minimum school bus construction standards state that these must be enclosed, padded, and wrapped in fire-block vinyl.

In your response, you stated, “In fact, the motorcoach industry is actually the safest mode of surface transportation according to both the U.S. Department of Transportation and the National Transportation Safety Board.” We know that school buses and motorcoaches are far safer than other means of student transportation, such as smaller passenger vehicles. Although on average about five school bus passengers die in crashes each year, school buses remain far safer than smaller passenger vehicles, especially those operated by teen drivers, which are 70 times less safe than school buses in terms of fatalities. Comparing school bus safety and motorcoach safety, however, is misleading at best. The operating environments and conditions of the two modes are often quite different, and serious injuries and fatalities to passengers are rare, making statistically valid conclusions about the relative safety of the two modes impossible. For those reasons, I would be interested in seeing any USDOT or NTSB studies, of which I am unaware, comparing the level of safety of school buses and motorcoaches.

Lastly, you mention that these “yellow charters” now fall under the purview and regulations of the Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration (FMCSA) due to our school groups who pay for the use of these buses. This is incorrect, as we are governed and regulated by the Oregon Department of Education. We are a public agency and do not operate “for hire.” These buses are for internal use and are not applicable to FMCSA/DOT regulations.

I appreciate you taking the time to read this and allowing me to correct and clarify the issues you raised with ABA’s response to Mr. McMahon.

Ad Loading...

Sincerely,

Chris Ellison
Transportation Manager
Eugene School District 4J
ellison@4j.lane.edu

More Safety

Kids need more from a driverless ride graphic comparing “Getting from A to B” vs “Student Transportation,” with a Waymo-style autonomous car image and School Bus Fleet logo.
SafetyFebruary 11, 2026

Autonomous Vehicles Aren’t Built for Student Transportation [Op-Ed]

Driverless cars may feel the future, but student transportation requires more than navigation. Here’s why it demands human judgment, empathy, and oversight.

Read More →
Graphic showing the front of a yellow school bus with cracked-glass overlay and headline reading “Fatal School Bus Hit & Run in New York,” dated February 5, 2026, alongside the School Bus Fleet logo.
Safetyby Staff and News ReportsFebruary 10, 2026

New York Girl Killed by School Bus Hit & Run

An 11-year-old in Brooklyn was killed crossing the street. Meanwhile, the school bus driver faces misdemeanor charges after he left the scene.

Read More →
2026 Disaster Response Guide Call for Experts is Open.
Safetyby StaffFebruary 9, 2026

Disaster Readiness Starts Before the Storm [Call for Experts]

The 2026 Disaster Response Guide is officially underway, and we’re now opening a Call for Insights and Experts.

Read More →
Ad Loading...
school bus driver with student
SponsoredFebruary 9, 2026

How Supplemental Transportation Helps Close Driver Gaps

Ongoing driver shortages nationwide are forcing tough transportation decisions. See how districts are using supplemental transportation to maintain coverage for high-needs students.

Read More →
Fatal School Bus Accident in New York graphic dated Jan. 29, 2026, showing a close-up of a yellow school bus with cracked-glass overlay and School Bus Fleet logo.
Safetyby StaffFebruary 3, 2026

New York 5-Year-Old Killed by School Bus, Investigation Ongoing

A Rockland County child was struck by their school bus late last week. Here's what we know so far about this and other fatalities and injuries in the area over the years.

Read More →
A red, orange and yellow graphic with anti-pinch door sensor products and text reading "Maine's New Mandate: Anti-Pinch-Sensors & Bus Safety."
Safetyby Elora HaynesJanuary 29, 2026

Prevent School Bus Dragging Incidents: Anti-Pinch Door Sensors and Maine’s New Mandate

As Maine becomes one of the first states to require anti-pinch door sensors on new school buses, manufacturers like Mayser offer a look at how the technology works and why it's a critical fail-safe.

Read More →
Ad Loading...
SponsoredJanuary 29, 2026

8 Ways To Simplify and Streamline School Bus Fleet Operations

What if your fleet technology actually worked together? Learn eight practical strategies to integrate multiple systems into one platform, unlocking clearer insights, stronger safety standards, and smoother daily operations.

Read More →
an illustration of a survey on a mobile phone with a hand on it, and the words Survey Says on it
Safetyby News/Media ReleaseJanuary 28, 2026

Survey: Most Parents Want Automated Enforcement on School Buses

A recent Verra Mobility survey reports that 82% of parents support safety cameras to penalize stop-arm violators and 70% favor automated enforcement in school zones.

Read More →
Image of an extended stop-arm with text reading "School Bus Safety: Funding Provides Bus Upgrades Across Ohio."
Safetyby StaffJanuary 27, 2026

State Grant Program Advances School Bus Safety Upgrades Across Ohio

$10 million in state grants will fund safety upgrades and new features on school buses serving students across the Buckeye State.

Read More →
Ad Loading...
A white Waymo vehicle waits at a crosswalk as a family crosses.
Safetyby StaffJanuary 26, 2026

Waymo Scrutiny Intensifies as NTSB Launches Investigation

After complications in multiple cities when self-driving taxis failed to stop for school buses, the NTSB joins NHTSA in a probe to determine what's behind the tech and related safety concerns.

Read More →