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"Competitive Environment" for Recruiting School Bus Drivers

Rich Egger

Some school districts across the nation don't have enough bus drivers, while other districts say they're getting by. TSPR spoke with a with a couple local school superintendents about the issue to get their thoughts.

Macomb Superintendent Patrick Twomey has called the school bus driver shortage "a crisis." He blamed the problem on the pandemic.

“Really, when this virus thing hit, it created a significant shortage across the country in bus drivers,” he said.  “Some of it naturally because as you look community-to-community, many of the bus drivers were elderly, and many of the people in that population made a conscious choice that they didn’t feel like it was in their best interest to continue to drive a bus full of children.”

Dr. Twomey said the shortage is unusual in Macomb. He said the district has about two dozen full-time routes and normally has more than enough drivers for them. But now it has just 18 drivers.

Twomey said the district continues searching for more drivers, and he said the positions might prove attractive to those who recently retired.

“If we could encourage just three, four, five newly retired people to drive morning and night, even if they didn’t want to drive five days a week. If you had ten people who wanted to drive two days a week, just to help out, collectively it would solve the problem,” he said.

Twomey says the district has boosted bus driver pay from $12 an hour three years ago to $18.50 now. It’s also offering signing bonuses.Listen to the story

In the neighboring West Prairie School District, Superintendent Guy Gradert said their routes are all covered currently. The district runs nine routes over its 244 square miles.

“We have been very fortunate to remain steadily staffed in our transportation department. We had a retirement in the last year, we had a resignation a couple weeks before school. However, we have been able to recruit replacements for those individuals,” he said.

But Gradert cautioned that it is always a challenge to fill school bus driver positions.

“I’m going into my tenth year as a superintendent (he previously led the Ridgeview School District in McLean County) and I don’t think there’s one year where I was not posting for a driver or a substitute driver. And so that really has been ongoing in education for a long time,” he said.

“But currently we are not faced with some of the challenges that our neighboring districts are.”

Gradert called this a “competitive environment” for hiring school bus drivers and said districts are constantly in recruitment mode.

Tri States Public Radio produced this story.  TSPR relies on financial support from our readers and listeners in order to provide coverage of the issues that matter to west central Illinois, southeast Iowa, and northeast Missouri. As someone who values the content created by TSPR's news department please consider making a financial contribution.

Copyright 2021 Tri States Public Radio. To see more, visit Tri States Public Radio.

Rich is the News Director at Tri States Public Radio. Rich grew up in the northwest suburbs of Chicago but now calls Macomb home. Rich has a B.A in Communication Studies with an Emphasis on Radio, TV, and Film from Northern Illinois University. Rich came to love radio in high school where he developed his “news nerdiness” as he calls it. Rich’s high school had a radio station called WFVH, which he worked at for a couple years. In college, Rich worked at campus station WKDI for three years, spinning tunes and serving at various times as General Manager, Music Director and Operations Manager. Before being hired as Tri States Public Radio’s news director in 1998, Rich worked professionally in news at WRMN-AM/WJKL-FM in Elgin and WJBC-AM in Bloomington. In Rich’s leisure time he loves music, books, cross-country skiing, rooting for the Cubs and Blackhawks, and baking sugar frosted chocolate bombs. His future plans include “getting some tacos.”