State troopers considering bus routes

By Matthew Penix
St. Tammany News
Published on Monday, October 13, 2008 9:33 AM CDT



Local school bus drivers may soon carry a bigger, tougher, kid on afternoon routes — a State Police trooper.

In an effort to thwart a surge in speeders and other traffic violators on school bus routes, State Police Troop L in Mandeville has developed a plan to place troopers on busses to monitor traffic. If a violator is spotted, the trooper radios to a nearby patrol car to make the stop.

“This could be in motion at the drop off a hat,” said Trooper Louis Calato, Troop L spokesman.

The measure was borne out of a rash of recent complaints from parents and school bus drivers themselves. Many claim drivers disregard driving laws in school zones and on bus routes, usually the same drivers every day.

“It’s gotten out of hand really,” Calato said.

Although logistics are hashed out and the plan is ready for launch,

State Police are not sure their crackdown will come to fruition.

As is, State Police and Sheriff’s Office deputies have teamed up to target violation hot spots such as Viola Street off Louisiana Highway 59 south of Interstate 12. The hope is to change driver behavior.

Violations are “inexcusable,” Calato said. “We don’t want that to happen. No, we can’t allow that to happen.”

For now, troopers compile a “hot sheet” filled with the most recent complaints and then flood those areas daily. It seems to be working. Complaints have dipped a little, Calato said, but if the downswing doesn’t continue, the school bus effort will be implemented.

The idea was modeled after State Police Troop G in Bossier City, which for five years has put troopers on school busses.

“It’s a huge deterrent,” said Doug Pierrelee, State Police Troop G spokesman. “It’s pretty high profile. People still stop me and say, ‘Hey, you still do that thing on the busses?’ People know about it.”

Although troopers don’t board busses often, it takes just once to send a message to nearby drivers, he said. A few dozen drivers ticketed seem to halt other would-be violators, he said.

Often, however, troopers aren’t even needed, he said.

A little know Louisiana law allows school bus drivers to call authorities with the color of the car and its license plate number to report a violator, Pierrelee said. A ticket will soon be issued to the owner, lessee or driver. In the case a driver can’t be identified, the owner is ticketed, Pierrelee said.

“We tell bus drivers all the time, ‘You have more power than you think,’” he said. “You don’t have to take that. It’s a very underused law.”


Comments

12 comment(s)

    Parent wrote on Oct 23, 2008 5:15 PM:

    " If you got the name and number for the company, or just the company name, call them yourself! Heavens, don't wait on the troopers to do it. They don't need a license no. just a company name. The company knows where its' drivers were at that time of day and they will know who to chew on. YOU call and at least get some satisfaction. "

    AAA bus driver wrote on Oct 22, 2008 5:30 PM:

    " And what also occurs daily, is that nobody wants to behind a bus, so whatever it takes to be in front of the bus you will do,like cutting us off, causing us to have to lock up our brakes!!! Lord forbid, All I can say, remember your child may be on that bus, or that may be your child outside that bus when the stop arms are disreguarded. "

    AAA bus driver wrote on Oct 22, 2008 5:23 PM:

    " Or even stpsb transportation dept. calling for you to help with children . from a broken down bus. We see more drivers on thier cell phones not paying attention to our stop signs. No bus drivers aren't susposed to run stop signs, but we're only human, not god.
    But when you run our stop arms you,not us, take such a great risk in killing a child,or many.This occurs on a daily basis!!! "

    AAA bus driver wrote on Oct 22, 2008 5:14 PM:

    " NO It's not the bus drivers that are always on the cell phone! Yes sometimes we are, but you do not know the circumstances of why. Have you ever thought that parents seem to think if they have the drivers cell number that they dont hesitate to call to say "can you please drop my child off here"or something to that effect, or "my child missed the bus, can you wait?" Or even the school calls to see if a specific child got on the bus instead of going to after school care. "

    Allan wrote on Oct 21, 2008 4:09 AM:

    " There's error on both sides. But since when is it legal for a school bus to run a stop sign. Earlier this year I was coming back into slidell from the hwy 11 bridge and a school bus ran right through the stop sign at the end of carr drive. The bus only slowed slightly before hitting hwy 11 pulling out right in front of me. I should have called the school board with the bus number right then. But the school board knows what bus travels carr drive. And the driver knows he/she ran the stop sign. "

    parent1 to parent6 wrote on Oct 20, 2008 9:46 PM:

    " We did get the name off the truck... but because it was loaded with long logs, the bus driver could not see the lisence plate number. State Troopers told me when I called that there wasn't much they could do without a lic. number. "

    Parent wrote on Oct 19, 2008 9:16 AM:

    " You should have gotten the name and number off the side of the truck and reported it to the Sheriff and the company right then...and kept doing so until you were satisfied something was done. We all make mistakes behind the wheel, but this is unforgivable and that driver should be called on the carpet for it. "

    About time wrote on Oct 19, 2008 9:13 AM:

    " I think the troopers would better serve us by keeping an eye on what the BUS DRIVERS are doing. As I drive around the parish, I am blown away by how they drive and no one even cares. I would think that the school bus drivers would be the best behaved, most professional out there because of their cargo...thank God my kid doesn't ride a bus! Work on the REAL problem, not the assumed one, and don't drop patronizing news releases out there for mass consumption until you actually have done something to keep our kids safe!!! "

    Joel Chew wrote on Oct 16, 2008 8:36 PM:

    " I hope the troopers can keep the bus drivers off the cell phones! In the last 2 weeks i have noticed 3 Bus drivers (i have bus numbers also)unable to negotiate turns well and driving into oncoming turn lanes because their heads are holding the phone to their shoulders. "

    Mike wrote on Oct 16, 2008 11:24 AM:

    " Maybe they can get the school buses to obey the speed zones too. In the Huntwyck Village neighborhood I have seen school buses fly by doing at least 35-40 mph.If a child or animal should run out they would not have a chance. "

    parent wrote on Oct 15, 2008 12:03 AM:

    " I also agree "tackle Hwy 41"!!! My 6 yr old child came within inches of being run over by a loaded log truck on 10-14-08 while getting on the bus in the morning. The truck did not stop in time and came to a stop on the RIGHT shoulder of the road between the bus and where my child stands to get on the bus. "

    curious_angel07 wrote on Oct 13, 2008 2:20 PM:

    " Tackle Hwy. 41 in Pearl River also, I travel it daily, you would not believe the stupid things these drivers are doing, they are placing these kids lives in danger. I saw a driver not stop for a child to cross the street to get on the bus in the morning. One day soon, we are going to be reading about a child, or children, being killed by a driver "hurrying to work". "

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