It’s back to school time! Well, for us, this is our first jump into the wonders of public school (Kindergarten, here we come!) Leading up to the big day, one question has been popular in the conversations: Will he ride the bus?

We have lived in our neighborhood for 8 years, and I have never heard of any sort of accident with the school bus. Bus #206 picks up the children from this neighborhood only. It stops at the end of our street, every morning and afternoon, right on time.

Belle Hall is a mere 2.5 miles from my garage. I can’t bike myself (six months pregnant), a five year-old, and a two year-old along Long Point Road at 7 a.m. and 2 p.m. I do not want to drive to that school 4 times day. 50 miles a week— back and forth — idling with all my neighbors is totally unacceptable. I don’t want to be wasting fuel unnecessarily and releasing more toxins into our atmosphere.

However, he is also only five, it’s a long day away from home, and he has only visited his new school three times. The thought of him becoming lost around those pods is worrisome. Wait a second, he is five! He knows his address and phone number. He knows where the bus stop is. He knows how to line up in a line and follow. He knows his bus number is #206.

Chad will take him the first few days, maybe weeks, on his way to work. Eventually we will wait for the bus in the morning too. After his first day of school, he will line up and ride his bus home. I will be waiting with proud tears. I hope to be able to tell my girlfriends that he loves his bus rides, maybe influence a few to give it a try.

We’ve been waving and watching that bus for five years now - he’s ready to climb up those steps!

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3 Responses to “A Green Look at the Great School Bus Debate”

  1. 1 Joshua Mueller

    GOOD LUCK! I don’t blame you for not wanting to drive back and forth all day and all week. As for those lines of traffic jamming parent chauffeurs, I don’t remember lines like that at any of the schools when I grew up… it just didn’t happen. We all took the bus, walked, or rode our bikes!

  2. 2 Chad Norman

    He loved riding the bus BTW!

    Also, I annualized the mileage: 1800 miles a year! If you’re rocking an SUV, that’s about $400-500 (about $160 for us in the Prius). Either way, that’s a lot of money to pay for bus-riding aversion.

  3. 3 Jenny Bloom

    I love the bus… both selfishly for the extra time it affords me in the mornings to get myself to work, and for the independance and confidence that my daughter has learned from the bus. I am hopeful it will help set-up mass transit comfort for her for the future…
    I love that when we travel to another city, and I say “subway”, “bus”, “train”, she doesn’t even flinch, but calls “window.” We’ve both made great friends and learned alot about the world around us by having a comfort level with public transport.

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