Two recent incidents involved student misbehavior and school bus windows. File photo courtesy NHTSA

Two recent incidents involved student misbehavior and school bus windows. File photo courtesy NHTSA

Many school buses lack air-conditioning systems, so the windows and roof hatches are often used to ventilate the bus on hot days.

In some parts of the country, school buses are now back on the road amid high temperatures. Two recent incidents in the news show what a touchy subject the use of school bus windows can be when it comes to student conduct.

In Milford, Delaware, a school bus driver was arrested on Wednesday for allegedly shutting the windows on her bus because of student misbehavior.

The alleged incident occurred on May 31, and a parent reported it to a school resource officer. The bus in question was operated by a contractor for Milford School District.

According to the Milford Police Department, an investigation found that the school bus driver pulled the bus over and closed the windows, along with the ceiling air vents. Police said that the driver’s action, reportedly in response to the students being too loud, caused the temperature in the bus to rise.

Six students, ranging in age from 6 to 11, reported heat-related symptoms to parents when they arrived home, the Milford Police Department said.

After a review of the case by the Delaware Attorney General’s Office, a warrant was obtained for school bus driver Teresa Grunden, 54. She was arrested on Wednesday of last week and charged with six counts of endangering the welfare of a child. She is scheduled to appear in court on Sept. 17.

In Jackson, Michigan, a similar incident on a hot day last week caught attention in the news and on social media. In this case, the bus in question was operated by a contractor for Northwest Community Schools, and the district reviewed footage from on-bus video cameras and data from GPS.

In a letter to parents, district Superintendent Geoff Bontrager said that a substitute school bus driver, who was covering an unfamiliar route on Thursday, asked students several times to lower their voices, stay in their seats, and keep their hands inside the windows while the bus was in motion. Bontrager said that the bus was running late, and as the students kept sticking their heads and hands out the windows, the driver told several passengers to put up the windows.

“At no time in the route was the heat turned on,” Bontrager noted. “During the entire route, several windows and roof vents remained open.”

The superintendent said the investigation determined that the school bus driver “did consider student safety” but didn’t respond with Northwest Community Schools’ expected positive behavior interventions. According to Bontrager, the driver, whom he did not identify in his letter, will not continue to drive for the district, and law enforcement will decide whether to take further action.

Clearly, there’s a quandary that can arise when bus windows are open. Students sticking their heads and hands out of the windows, as reported in the Michigan incident, is a serious safety issue. On the other hand, there are times when the windows need to be open to provide relief from the heat — which, unfortunately, can make behavior management more difficult.

With that in mind, does your operation have a policy on the use of school bus windows? And how should drivers handle situations like those described above? Post a comment below.

About the author
Thomas McMahon

Thomas McMahon

Executive Editor

Thomas had covered the pupil transportation industry with School Bus Fleet since 2002. When he's not writing articles about yellow buses, he enjoys running long distances and making a joyful noise with his guitar.

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