SBF 70 years logo
MenuMENU
SearchSEARCH

Study: School Systems Giving Drivers More Hours to Combat Shortage

The North Carolina Department of Public Instruction study finds that some school systems offer drivers work in other departments to get them full-time hours and pay.

Nicole Schlosser
Nicole SchlosserFormer Executive Editor
August 22, 2018
Study: School Systems Giving Drivers More Hours to Combat Shortage

A North Carolina Department of Public Instruction study finds that some school systems offer drivers work in other departments to get them full-time hours and pay. File photo courtesy John Horton

4 min to read


A North Carolina Department of Public Instruction study finds that some school systems offer drivers work in other departments to get them full-time hours and pay. File photo courtesy John Horton

RALEIGH, N.C. — To combat driver shortage, school systems in North Carolina are finding work for drivers in other departments, requiring other staff members to drive buses, and recommending accelerating the recruitment process, according to a recent study.

The North Carolina Department of Public Instruction (DPI) worked with North Carolina State University’s Institute for Transportation Research and Education on a study that compared conditions for drivers in school systems statewide. The study used existing data from the DPI, federal data, and results from a recent survey, according to a report on the study, which was presented to the North Carolina General Assembly.

The General Assembly tasked the DPI with producing the report addressing school bus driver compensation and employment in 2017 for the Joint Legislative Education Oversight Committee and the Fiscal Research Division, because North Carolina, just like many other states, is facing a significant driver shortage.

Study findings include:

•    Average hourly wage reported to DPI by school systems: $14.13.
•    Yearly wages for a full-time driver (seven hours): $18,298 (185 days/1,295 hours).
•    Yearly wages for a half-time driver (four hours): $10,456 (185 days/740 hours).
•    31.9% of drivers are full-time drivers, and 73% of those are in the largest six school systems.  
•    34.8% are full time because they work another position in the school system (at their option or because the school system requires non-certified staff to drive school buses).
•    Average time to finish Department of Motor Vehicles (DMV) school bus driver training: 54 days (some respondents reported months longer).
•    Average out-of-pocket costs before potential employment: $260.

Additionally, the study found that some applicants cannot complete the application process due to medical and driving record requirements, license training and testing requirements, and the length of time it takes to get hired. About one-fifth of current full-time route drivers have been on the job for less than two years, said Kevin Harrison, state director of pupil transportation at the North Carolina DPI.

Harrison also noted that even full-time school bus drivers were only working 10 months out of the year.

The findings fall in line with a national school bus driver shortage based on a strong economy with other jobs available that offer more competitive pay and hours, diminishing the pool of candidates; the difficulty of working a second job due to the split shifts many bus drivers are required to work; the amount of time and money the candidate needs to invest in training; and the amount of responsibility that is involved in safely transporting children.

School systems in North Carolina have mainly employed two strategies to give school bus drivers full-time hours, which is key to retaining drivers, Harrison said: tiered school bus routing (varying school start times so that any driver in any bus can run multiple routes) and dual employment (providing another job to the driver, such as teacher's aide or custodian).

The North Carolina study found that large districts mostly use tiered routing and spreading out the schedule to get full-time employment for their drivers, and small districts primarily rely on dual employment.

“Being full time tends to increase people's willingness to stay on,” Harrison said. “There’s this group of core drivers that stick with you, and then there is a group where you are always rotating new drivers in.”

Districts in some counties are enforcing a policy that requires other school staff members, such as teacher’s assistants, non-managerial custodial staff members, and child nutrition staff members, to obtain CDLs, due to an inability to maintain enough school bus drivers, Harrison added.

“Some [make it] voluntary, so staff can make the higher rate of pay, because the teacher’s assistants' rate of pay is lower than a school bus driver’s, and some of the staff are required to do it [for] their job, either as a substitute or regular route driver,” he said.

In some cases, the practice is seen as a necessity for transportation departments to continue operating, but some staff view it as an imposition, and counties that have the requirement reported more difficulties recruiting and retaining those other positions.

“They not only have to find somebody who is a good child nutrition worker, but who is also willing to drive a school bus filled with children, and sometimes those skill sets don’t match up,” Harrison said. “But some transportation departments report that it’s nearly essential they do it.”

School districts' proposed solutions for addressing school bus driver shortage fell into four main categories: an increase in hourly compensation, an increase in hours and benefits availability, accelerating the recruitment process, and increasing job satisfaction and training.

Last year, the North Carolina General Assembly gave school bus drivers a larger raise than other state employees. As part of the state's 2018-19 fiscal year budget, school systems will receive $4,387,650 “to increase the average rates of pay for all school bus drivers ... on an equitable basis,” according to state Senate Bill 99 (see the bottom of pg. 43). That amount is about what would be needed for a 2% raise for school bus drivers, Harrison said.

More Management

Three people pose in front of a line of school buses.
Managementby Staff and News ReportsJune 16, 2026

BusRight Honors Texas Driver With Inaugural Behind The Wheel Award

Selected from more than 300 nominations, Lawson Crook earned BusRight’s inaugural award for his dedication to students and safety.

Read More →
Promotional graphic for The Route podcast by School Bus Fleet. On a bright yellow background with light circular accents, large text reads "4 Decades of Leadership Lessons." Featured guest Craig Beaver of Beaverton School District is shown smiling in a suit and tie on the right side of the image. The School Bus Fleet logo and The Route branding appear at the top left, with sponsorship by IC Bus displayed near the top center.
Sponsoredby Amanda HuggettJune 15, 2026

Craig Beaver’s Final Stop: Lessons from 43 Years in Transportation

After more than four decades in transportation, retiring Beaverton School District director Craig Beaver reflects on leadership, alternative fuels, AI, staffing, and what’s coming next. The Route is sponsored by IC Bus.

Read More →
The Route thumbnail with school bus fleet logo
ManagementJune 15, 2026

What 43 Years in Transportation Taught Craig Beaver About Leadership

After more than four decades in transportation, retiring Beaverton School District admin Craig Beaver reflects on leadership, alternative fuels, AI, staffing, and what’s coming next.

Read More →
Ad Loading...
Tod Eskra stands on an award stage to accept recognition
Managementby News/Media ReleaseJune 12, 2026

ASTP's Tod Eskra Named an Entrepreneur of the Year

The award from Ernst & Young honors visionary leadership behind one of America's fastest-growing student transportation contracting companies.

Read More →
A black and white image of a school bus technician checking diagnostics as part of a graphic with text reading "How Do Today's School Bus Manufacturers Measure Up?"
Managementby StaffJune 10, 2026

Drivers and Technicians: Help Benchmark Today's School Bus Manufacturers

If you've spent time behind the wheel or under the hood, we want to hear your perspective on the buses you know best.

Read More →
Thumbnail graphic for a School Bus Fleet video compilation. A yellow electric school bus serves as the background, with speech bubbles containing words such as “Dynamic,” “Green,” “Critical,” “Complex,” “Family,” and “Underfunded.” A red banner reads, “12 Suppliers. 1 Question. Many Answers.” The video explores how industry suppliers describe the current state of the school bus market.
Managementby Amanda HuggettJune 5, 2026

13 Industry Leaders Describe School Transportation in One Word

What word best describes the school bus industry today? We posed that question to over a dozen manufacturers, resulting in a revealing mix of perspectives on the challenges and opportunities ahead.

Read More →
Ad Loading...
Leadership update graphic announcing executive appointments at Tyler Technologies. Headshots of Ryan O’Connor, named chief transactions officer, and Franklin Williams, named chief AI officer, appear alongside the Tyler Technologies logo and School Bus Fleet branding.
Managementby News/Media ReleaseJune 5, 2026

Tyler Technologies Adds New AI, Transactions Leadership Roles

Two company executives are promoted to newly created C-suite positions to accelerate the company's long-term growth in both artificial intelligence and payments.

Read More →
An orange and white graphic with Pro-Vision and Convoy Technologies logos, and text reading "Pro-Vision Acquires Convoy Technologies."
Managementby News/Media ReleaseJune 4, 2026

Pro-Vision Acquires Convoy Technologies

The deal aims to broaden customer relationships and adds specialized vehicle video capabilities for commercial fleets.

Read More →
A Durham School Services bus with two people posing in front of it.

Durham School Services Maintenance Teams Earn Missouri Fleet Excellence Awards

Eight of the contractor’s school bus fleets achieved a distinction few maintenance teams earn during the state’s rigorous annual inspection program.

Read More →
Ad Loading...
Joe Annotti of TRC Companies speaks at ACT Expo. A text overlay reads, “School Buses as Money Makers?” highlighting discussion about electrification, vehicle-to-grid technology, and new revenue opportunities for school bus fleets.
Managementby Amanda HuggettJune 3, 2026

How Incentives, AI, and Energy Markets Are Reshaping School Transportation

Sit down with Joe Annotti of TRC Companies to talk district grant funding, utility challenges, AI, and why school buses are evolving from transportation assets into energy assets.

Read More →