SchoolBus logo in red and orange
MenuMENU
SearchSEARCH

Survey Highlights Severity of Driver-Shortage Issues

The industry will have to go through a period of adjustment and become innovative in ways we have not previously utilized. For example, we have seen an increase in wages and benefits, but wages and benefits only provide a partial solution to this comprehensive problem.

by Carina Noble
November 16, 2021
Survey Highlights Severity of Driver-Shortage Issues

The NSTA is sharing best practices among members to help recruit, screen, train, and retain drivers.

Photo by Darran Shelton on Unsplash

3 min to read


The National School Transportation (NSTA) co‐sponsored a recent survey, along with our colleagues at the National Association for Pupil Transportation (NAPT) and the National Association of State Directors of Pupil Transportation Services (NASDPTS), to gather data regarding America’s school bus driver shortage.

The survey was conducted in late July and early August, and it garnered nearly 1,500 responses. Because of the robust participation, the survey had a level of precision for statistics that is +/‐ 2.5% at 95% confidence.

Ad Loading...

In other words, the survey and its responses provided a legitimate snapshot into the student transportation world at a critical period – during preparation for Back‐to‐School and while managing through COVID.

Overall, the survey aimed to understand the depths of the school bus driver shortage. After all, we had been observing the landscape for better part of 2021. In that respect, the survey results were certainly no surprise. What we saw was that a vast majority of pupil transportation professionals were affected regardless of school district size or geography.

Some of the significant findings highlighted what most of us were seeing in our own operations. First, every region of the country is currently altering transportation service due to the COVID‐19 pandemic. The breakdown was very similar across the board with 79% of respondents in the Northeast saying they have altered service, 77% in the Midwest, 66% percent in the South, and 80% in the West.

In terms of student transportation providers having to balance competing schedules, it was noted that 91% of respondents said they have altered service to elementary schools, 90% have altered service to middle schools, and 83% have altered service to high schools.

With respect to the driver shortage, most of the responses fell in line with observations we witnessed recently, as 51% of respondents described their driver shortage as “severe” or “desperate”, and roughly two‐thirds of all respondents (65%) indicated that bus driver shortage is their number one problem or concern. We were also interested in whether the situation was trending better or worse; roughly three‐quarters of all respondents (78%), indicated that the school bus driver shortage is getting “much worse” or “a little worse”.

Ad Loading...

If nothing else, the survey strongly confirmed many of the dynamics that student transportation has encountered over the past several months, and while this information provides a good foundation for discussions between stakeholders and policymakers, it does not contain a much‐needed solution to the bus driver shortage.

The industry will have to go through a period of adjustment and become innovative in ways we have not previously utilized. For example, we have seen an increase in wages and benefits, but wages and benefits only provide a partial solution to this comprehensive problem. For example, if operators are simply vying for the same workers, the industry will still be left short staffed. Instead, operators are going to have to be keenly focused on maintaining their current level of staffing, and then seek long-term solutions that will ultimately increase the school bus driver pool.

At NSTA, we are sharing best practices among our members to help companies recruit, screen, train and retain drivers and are also working with policymakers to take a comprehensive review of the Commercial Driver’s License (CDL) requirements to ensure that they are streamlined and applicable to student transportation. Part of the solution lies within our ability to lean on State Driver’s License Agencies (SDLAs) to become more flexible and remove unnecessary wait times and barriers to entry.

As we realized early in the pandemic, solving problems requires everyone to pull together in the interests of our primary stakeholder – the nearly 26-million children we transport to and from school each day.

Subscribe to Our Newsletter

More Blogposts

Mobility House
School Bus Fleet Blogby Sam Hill-Cristol, The Mobility HouseJuly 12, 2024

The Technology Power Combo That Enables EV Charging on Difficult Sites

As the pace of fleet electrification increases and charging infrastructure continues to pose challenges, many fleets find themselves puzzling over the question: how do I install charging infrastructure faster and more cost-efficiently?

Read More →
Wes Platt
School Bus Fleet Blogby Wes PlattJune 28, 2024

Trip Sheet: Farewell, Faithful Readers – Keep on Rolling

Executive Editor Wes Platt offers parting thoughts as he parks the School Bus Fleet bus to focus on ultra-local community journalism, making way for someone else to take the wheel as the pupil transportation industry continues to evolve.

Read More →
Poster image for Children's Mental Health Awareness Day.
School Bus Fleet Blogby Wes PlattMay 9, 2024

Trip Sheet: School Transportation Pros Can Champion Children's Mental Health

Children's Mental Health Awareness Day underscores the significance of school bus drivers in fostering supportive environments during students' journeys. SAMHSA's initiatives, including stigma reduction and access to resources, complement the Biden-Harris administration's funding efforts to enhance youth mental health services and workforce development.

Read More →
Ad Loading...
School Bus Fleet Blogby Wes PlattMarch 26, 2024

Trip Sheet: Is It Time for Daylight Saving Time to Clock Out?

How do you think the potential shift to permanent Daylight Saving Time or standard time would impact our daily lives and routines, especially considering the divided approach across various states?

Read More →
School Bus Fleet Blogby Wes PlattFebruary 26, 2024

Trip Sheet: Meeting a Hero in My Own Back Yard

I remain impressed by the matter-of-fact heroism that’s often demonstrated by school bus drivers like Deona Washington who are caught in these situations where the best of us might lose our cool and panic. But, then again, bus drivers are a unique breed.

Read More →
School Bus Fleet Blogby Wes PlattFebruary 13, 2024

Trip Sheet: 3 Takeaways from the EPA Clean School Bus Grant Program

Most applicants sought grant funding to acquire electric school buses, with propane coming in a distant second. No one indicated plans to purchase compressed natural gas (CNG) buses in this round. That’s not terribly surprising, I suppose, given how few school districts listed the inclusion of CNG buses in their fleets for our 2023 top district fleets survey.

Read More →
Ad Loading...
School Bus Fleet Blogby Wes PlattJanuary 30, 2024

Trip Sheet: Let's Get Rolling: What's Coming in 2024?

Calendar pages keep flipping toward the mandates set in states like New York and California to transition their school bus fleets from diesel to zero-emission, but there’s plenty of reluctance and pushback.

Read More →
School Bus Fleet Blogby Jennifer Smith, Special to SBFJanuary 18, 2024

California School Children Ride in Green School Buses

Today, California prides itself on utilizing the most zero-emission (ZE) school buses in the country with over 1,689 being used by California school districts; and while the state is on a positive health trajectory thanks to a decree to eliminate gas and diesel vehicles, more work needs to be done to improve children’s well-being.

Read More →
School Bus Fleet Blogby Steven M. Gursten, Special to SBFDecember 26, 2023

Behind The Wheel of Childrens’ Safety Aboard the School Bus

Bus drivers are the primary caretakers of children during their commute and thus bear responsibility for their safety. By prioritizing proper operating procedures, maintenance checks, and additional precautions, drivers can help avoid the loss of precious young lives under their care.

Read More →
Ad Loading...
School Bus Fleet Blogby Wes PlattDecember 20, 2023

Trip Sheet: Looking Ahead - Navigating Around Vehicle Automation

FMCSA proposes to amend certain Federal Motor Carrier Safety Regulations (FMCSRs) to ensure the safe introduction of automated driving systems (ADS)-equipped commercial motor vehicles (CMVs) onto the nation’s roadways. The proposed changes to the CMV operations, inspection, repair, and maintenance regulations prioritize safety and security, promote innovation, foster a consistent regulatory approach to ADS-equipped CMVs, and recognize the difference between human operators and ADS.

Read More →