In two weeks, Yonkers mom Cher Santiago, will drop off her son Guy, 5, on a school bus for the first time. It's a new experience for both of them filled with excitement and nerves.
"It's a lot of anxiety and I've never let anyone else care for him in that way, so I'm handing him off for the first time," Santiago said.
This new school year comes amid a push for more safety measures both on and off the bus. Earlier this year, two private school children died after being hit by school buses in Rockland County signaling the need to continue to educate and improve pedestrian safety across the Hudson Valley.
"Parents send us their most prized possession and that's their children, so I think we have a responsibility that once they take them to the bus stop and let them go that they feel safe and comfortable," Yonkers Superintendent of Schools Aníbal Soler, Jr. said.
To combat any fears and proactively prepare students to ride the bus, the Yonkers School District, Westchester's largest, held a First Time School Bus Riders Safety Orientation program on Thursday. The events took place across each of the district's school campuses.
At the William Boyce Thompson school, dozens of parents and their preschool, Kindergartener and new-to-the-district students learned about bus safety and took part in a ride-along on a bus to ease any nerves.
"The best form of prevention is education," Soler, Jr. said.
Educators and transportation safety leaders had several recommendations to keep kids safe this upcoming school year:
- Arrive 10 minutes early to the bus stop to avoid rushing which can lead to a greater chance of accidents.
- Parents should hold their child's hand while waiting at the bus stop.
- Stay on the sidewalk or several feet back from the edge of the road until the bus comes to a complete stop.
- Avoid the 'danger zone' of a school bus, which includes the 10 feet in front and behind the bus.
- Always wait until the bus comes to a complete stop before crossing the road to board the vehicle.
- Drivers should always slow down when the blinking yellow lights come on and stop at least 20 feet away from the bus once the red lights and stop sign come out.
- With school getting back into session in just a few weeks drivers should remember to take it slow in and around schools as well as school zones.
The city of Yonkers officially launched its "Yonkers Safe Stop" school bus camera program on Nov. 13, 2023. Cameras yielded 18,132 violations to drivers illegally passing school buses in its inaugural year.