Ventura County Grand Jury
• 2010-2011
• Agency Response
Response to:
School Bus Safety
Board of Trustees County of Ventura Grand Jury Ernest Morrison*
⚠️ Translation Notice: This content has been automatically translated. The original English text is the official version. Translation may contain errors.
⚠️ Este contenido ha sido traducido automáticamente. El texto original en inglés es la versión oficial. La traducción puede contener errores.
Note: Missing finding numbers detected: F6
Findings and Recommendations 4 findings
F03
Page 3
Not all districts maintain information on school bus safety statistics. Some districts do not track this information at all, while others rely on their contracted bus companies to do so. We disagree with this statement because of its broad implications that school districts do not maintain records in accordance with established law. OSD is required to maintain and report specific information related to our student transportation program on the "Form TRANS." That form is included in the annual unaudited financial report available to the public and submitted to the California Department of Education. However, OSD is not required to maintain and report specific statistics related to school bus accidents. That requirement resides with the California Highway Patrol.
No recommendations for this finding
F04
Page 3
Due to the lack of comparable, consistent school bus safety statistics provided by the districts, it is not possible to determine objective measures of school bus safety, such as accident rates. Thus, it is difficult to conclude that school bus transportation in the County is safe, as previously demonstrated at the national level. It is only possible to infer that school bus transportation in the County is safe from the information provided by the districts. We disagree with this statement because of its broad implications that school districts do not maintain records in accordance with established law. Each school district in California is required by law to submit annual transportation information to the California Department of Education on the "Form TRANS." The California Highway Patrol is required to investigate school bus accidents and has a database capable of tracking the accidents by county. Both sets of data are available to the public and could be used to make an educated conclusion of the number of accidents per mile driven or per student served.
No recommendations for this finding
F05
Page 3
School bus safety statistics, for districts or for individual schools, are not readily available to the public. We disagree with this statement. We believe that the public has access to and can obtain all the school bus accident and transportation program information that the CHP and OSD are mandated to collect and report. . Grand Jury Response July 27, 2011 RECOMMENDATIONS THAT WILL NOT BE IMPLEMENTED
No recommendations for this finding
F07
Page 2
The Grand Jury was unable to identify any single local agency Support Services responsible for collecting, collating, and reporting County school CATHERINE KAWAGUCHI Assistant Superintendent bus safety information on a countywide basis. Chief Academic Officer We agree that there is not one agency mandated to collect, collate and LISA CLINE Assistant Superintendent report school bus safety information on a countywide basis if the Business and Fiscal Services information being identified by the Grand Jury attempts to directly link student rider ship with school bus accidents. Public K-12 school districts in California are required to submit basic transportation program information to the California Department of Education on the "Form TRANS" each year along with the district's unaudited financial information. This public information includes the average number of students transported daily and total miles driven to/from school. School districts are not required to report accident information. However, as the report states, the California Highway Patrol (CHP) is required to investigate school bus accidents. The report goes on to state that the CHP Statewide Integrated Traffic Records System includes school bus- involved collision data on a countywide basis, but does not identify individual information for each district or jurisdiction in the County. We recommend that the Grand Jury request that the California Highway Patrol database be expanded with a field to include the school district or jurisdiction associated with the bus. This simple change to an existing data collection system would provide the public with specific information Mission: "We guarantee that each student is academically competitive and inspired to perseverant hope." Grand Jury Response July 27, 2011 relating to a single jurisdiction. When combined with the currently available data from the "Form TRANS", an interested party could obtain more specific information on the operation of a public school transportation program. FINDINGS WITH WHICH WE DISAGREE:
No recommendations for this finding
* This report's PDF did not contain easily extractable text and required Optical Character Recognition (OCR) for analysis. There may be minor errors in the extracted findings and recommendations due to OCR limitations with scanned documents.