School Transportation Legislative Study Panel Seeks Public Input

The public can give oral testimony during the commission’s meeting, which is scheduled for 3:45 p.m. Monday in the House Lounge or written testimony via email

Buses owned by First Student, a nationwide transportation company and one of increasingly few competitors in Rhode Island’s statewide school bus system, are seen on East Main Road in Portsmouth.
Buses owned by First Student, a nationwide transportation company and one of increasingly few competitors in Rhode Island’s statewide school bus system, are seen on East Main Road in Portsmouth.
Ken Castro/Rhode Island Current
Share
Buses owned by First Student, a nationwide transportation company and one of increasingly few competitors in Rhode Island’s statewide school bus system, are seen on East Main Road in Portsmouth.
Buses owned by First Student, a nationwide transportation company and one of increasingly few competitors in Rhode Island’s statewide school bus system, are seen on East Main Road in Portsmouth.
Ken Castro/Rhode Island Current
School Transportation Legislative Study Panel Seeks Public Input
Copy

A special legislative commission studying Rhode Island’s school bus system wants to hear what members of the public think about how the state’s K-12 students get to school.

The 13-member panel co-chaired by Sen. Linda Ujifusa, a Portsmouth Democrat, alongside fellow Portsmouth Democrat Rep. Terri Cortvriend, was formed last June by the General Assembly to ponder what changes need to be made to laws governing the statewide transportation program. Ahead of its meeting scheduled next Monday, Feb. 10, the commission is seeking written comments but will also welcome in-person testimony at the meeting.

State law requires local school districts to pay the costs of transporting students who attend private, religious, or career and technical schools outside their hometown.

At its most recent meeting on Jan. 13, commissioners pondered solutions to Rhode Island’s school transportation challenges, from addressing a school bus driver shortage to considering the Rhode Island Public Transit Authority’s recent success with student transport in Providence.

The next meeting will include a presentation from Rhode Island Department of Education (RIDE) Chief Operations Officer Dr. Mario Carreño on how transportation to private schools is currently funded.

Under state law, school districts are required to use a statewide transportation service administered by RIDE, unless they apply for an exemption. Districts can get reimbursed, sometimes at less than the promised 100% rebate rate, for private school students, it buses within its own district.

Monday’s agenda also includes presentations by the Independent Schools Association of Rhode Island, the Diocese of Providence, and public school superintendents from both sides of Narragansett Bay.

Written testimony must be emailed to Commission Secretary Christine O’Connor at COconnor@rilegislature.gov. The public can also give oral testimony during the commission’s meeting, which is scheduled for 3:45 p.m. Monday in the House Lounge.

This article was originally published by the Rhode Island Current.

Wait for the Coast Guard and Army Corps of Engineers to sign off has been more than 90 days
Attorney General Peter Neronha’s long-awaited report resulted in new indictments for 4 one-time priests and identifies 75 credibly accused priests and more than 300 victims, concluding church leaders repeatedly prioritized avoiding scandal over protecting children
Our planet is getting hotter, but at the same time, snowstorms seem to be getting bigger. In the wake of Rhode Island’s record-setting blizzard, we’re looking back at a 2022 episode of Possibly that explains what’s going on
From free tax assistance and a banned book club discussion of The Handmaid’s Tale to an AI and youth forum and a massive CD, DVD and vinyl sale, here’s what’s happening across Providence’s nine community libraries this month