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Indiana District Approves Purchase of School Bus Stop-Arm Cameras

The South Bend Community School Corp. will install 192 stop-arm cameras on its buses.

by Sadiah Thompson and Nicole Schlosser
March 29, 2019
Indiana District Approves Purchase of School Bus Stop-Arm Cameras

The South Bend (Ind.) Community School Corp. will install 192 stop-arm cameras on its buses. Photo courtesy South Bend Community School Corp.

2 min to read


The South Bend (Ind.) Community School Corp. will install 192 stop-arm cameras on its buses. Photo courtesy South Bend Community School Corp.

SOUTH BEND, Ind. — A school district here approved funding on Monday to install stop-arm cameras on its school buses.

The South Bend Community School Corp. board, at their meeting, unanimously approved the purchase of 192 camera systems that will cost approximately $456,504, according to WNDU. Each bus will be equipped with two stop-arm cameras and three 360-degree cameras around the bus to record the license plate of stop-arm violators, the news source reports.

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The cameras are expected to be installed on all of the district’s buses by the beginning of the 2019-20 school year, according to the news source.

Juan Martinez-Legus, the director of transportation for South Bend Community School Corp., told WNDU that “this is a huge deal for our transportation department moving forward,” and that the district is “going to do everything we can to protect our kids.”

Martinez-Legus added that the cameras will send a message to motorists that “if you pass a South Bend bus, you will receive a citation.” (School bus drivers in South Bend had their stop arms run 402 times in a single day when they participated in the 2018 National Association of State Directors of Pupil Transportation Services annual stop-arm survey, Martinez-Legus told SBF.)

The district's decision to install the cameras comes after the fatal school bus crash in Rochester, Indiana, in October that killed three students and seriously injured one other. As SBF previously reported, the motorist told investigators that she didn't see the bus, which had its lights flashing and stop-arm extended, or the students until it was too late. She was charged with three counts of reckless homicide and a misdemeanor count for passing a school bus with the stop arm extended, causing injury.

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