SBF 70 years logo
MenuMENU
SearchSEARCH

Inside SBSC’s New Safety Leadership Program

Built on the ABC model and decades of NORMS training, the course helps transportation supervisors turn safe behaviors into habits with a standardized safety culture.

December 17, 2025
An orange and white graphic with an image of a school bus and text reading "School Bus Safety Leadership."

The Safety Leadership course is now being used by a growing list of contractors and districts across the school bus industry.

Photo: Miguel Rivera/School Bus Fleet

3 min to read


A longtime school bus safety training provider is expanding its catalog with a new product aimed not at drivers, but at the people who coach them.

The School Bus Safety Company (SBSC) has launched a Safety Leadership course, a two-hour course designed to help transportation supervisors and managers build safety habits through consistent, behavior-based training.

Ad Loading...

The program is now being used by a growing list of contractors and districts across the industry, according to the company's founder and president, Jeff Cassell. The course is built around a simple premise, that safe operations depend on automatic habits, not just rules.

“NORMS are the way people act, automatically, without thinking,” Cassell says. “If you can instill into the drivers the desired NORMS, like maintaining a four-second following distance, they will automatically operate safely.”

Reinforcing Safety NORMS Through Leadership

SBSC has identified 22 core NORMS for school bus operations, practices the company has taught for nearly 20 years and embedded in its Safety Management System materials.

What’s new in the Safety Leadership program is how those NORMS are reinforced. The course trains leaders to use the “ABC model” of human behavior, which is categorized as antecedents, behaviors, and consequences, to shape safe decisions from day one.

In practice, that means setting expectations at hiring, repeating them during onboarding and behind-the-wheel training, and consistently cueing and rewarding safe actions until they become routine. Cassell describes these “formalized antecedents” as the missing piece in many safety programs, helping prevent unsafe habits before they harden into culture.

Ad Loading...

The Safety Leadership course also plugs into SBSC’s wider safety ecosystem, including its “Trifecta of Safety” framework and a Safety Reminder Series of short, five to eight-minute refresher videos that reinforce required NORMS year-round. Cassell said the company can expand that library as new operational risks or technologies emerge, keeping training continuous rather than one-and-done.

What Fleets Are Saying About Safety Leadership

Early feedback suggests the approach is resonating. Landmark Student Transportation rated the Safety Leadership program a 9.7 out of 10, noting that it reinforces safety expectations across an organization. 

Student Transportation of America reported overwhelmingly positive internal reviews after testing the course with operational staff, with most participants rating it at the top of the scale and recommending a systemwide rollout.

Additional reviews from safety leaders described the program as current, relevant, and practical for supervisors who need to consistently coach safe performance, not just correct problems after the fact.

With more fleets facing driver shortages, rising claims costs, and increasing public scrutiny, SBSC is positioning the Safety Leadership program to standardize safe behavior across locations and reduce incidents through proactive coaching. The company noted that their legacy NORMS-based training is used by large contractors and is intended to ensure frontline leaders have the tools to sustain those behaviors long after the initial training period.

Ad Loading...

The intent is in the vision: Do it right the first time, every time.

Learn more here, or fill out a course preview request

More Safety

zonar system image
SponsoredMay 1, 2026

What Data Shows About Student Transportation in 2026

Driver shortages, safety expectations, and staffing limits define student transportation in 2026. New survey data shows how fleet leaders are responding.

Read More →
an overturned school bus on a roadway after an accident
Safetyby News/Media ReleaseApril 24, 2026

NTSB Calls for Alcohol Impairment Systems, Seat Belts After W.V. Crash Investigation

The federal agency's report asks NHTSA to require all new school buses to be equipped with vehicle-integrated alcohol detection systems and passenger lap-shoulder belts.

Read More →
zonar system image
SponsoredApril 20, 2026

2026 State of Student Transportation Report

Student transportation teams are being asked to do more with less, facing driver shortages, rising costs, and increasing safety expectations. This report uncovers how fleets are adapting, where technology is making the biggest impact, and why student ridership tracking is emerging as a top priority. Download the report to explore the key trends shaping 2026 and what they mean for your operation.

Read More →
Ad Loading...
A close-up view of the top of a yellow school bus with “School Bus” signage and red lights, overlaid with a cracked-glass effect. Text on the image reads, “Multi-Vehicle Crash in TN Takes 2 Lives” and “March 27, 2026,” with the School Bus Fleet logo in the corner.
Safetyby Staff and News ReportsApril 17, 2026

2 Students Die in Tennessee School Bus Crash with Dump Truck

A Carroll County accident claimed the lives of two students and injured over a dozen others on a March 27 field trip for eighth graders at Clarksville-Montgomery County. A preliminary report adds new information to the story.

Read More →
A black, white, and red graphic with an image of Wisconsin political figures by a table and text reading "Legislative Roundup April 2026."
Safetyby Elora HaynesApril 17, 2026

School Bus Laws to Watch: Driver Shortages, EV Debates & Safety Upgrades

From driver shortage solutions in Tennessee and rural connectivity debates in Utah to new safety laws in Wisconsin and ongoing electric bus mandate discussions in New York and Connecticut, here’s the latest in school bus legislation across the U.S.

Read More →
A rendering of the 6th-generation Waymo Driver on Hyundai’s all-electric IONIQ 5 SUV
Safetyby Staff and News ReportsApril 9, 2026

Senate Report: Autonomous Car Companies Hiding Reliance on Remote Operators

Waymo’s self-driving vehicles are under fire again after repeated school bus passing violations, raising questions about safety, remote operators, and regulation.

Read More →
Ad Loading...
Children cross in front of a stopped school bus with its stop arm extended while a nearby vehicle waits, illustrating school zone safety and risks of illegal passing.
Safetyby News/Media ReleaseApril 9, 2026

Industry Suppliers Offer Distracted Driving Awareness Month Reminders

Distracted driving continues to pose serious risks in school zones, with new data and driver insights highlighting ongoing concerns and potential solutions to improve student and roadway safety.

Read More →
Graphic featuring a headshot of Michael Graham, Vice Chairman of the National Transportation Safety Board, wearing a dark suit and red tie against an orange gradient background, with “Leadership Update” and School Bus Fleet branding on the left.
Safetyby StaffApril 8, 2026

NTSB Names Michael Graham Vice Chair: Where He Stands on School Bus Safety

A former airline pilot has stepped into a new role at the independent federal agency, but where does he stand on issues like seat belts on school buses? Here’s what he’s said.

Read More →
Graphic with bold yellow background and red headline reading “A Split Second from Disaster,” alongside a photo of a freight train traveling down railroad tracks. Subtext reads, “What one incident reminds us about railroad crossing safety,” with School Bus Fleet branding at the bottom.
Safetyby Amanda HuggettApril 7, 2026

'A Train Is Coming': Florida School Bus Close Call Highlights Critical Railroad Safety Reminders

Two recent close calls at railroad crossings, a train clipping a bus and a rear-end crash, highlight why vigilance and training still matter. Here’s what happened and what to tell your own drivers.

Read More →
Ad Loading...
Safetyby Staff and News ReportsApril 7, 2026

No Train, No Stop? FMCSA Considers Rule Change for School Buses

The federal agency's proposed rulemaking would eliminate the requirement for school buses to come to a complete stop at railroad crossings if the warning device is not activated. The goal: to improve traffic flow and save costs. With new data released, public comment is open through April 27, 2026.

Read More →