Superintendent News & Views
Taken for a Ride
By David Hill, Gladbrook-Reinbeck Superintendent
During the 2016-2017 school year, Gladbrook-Reinbeck’s school buses traveled over 53,000 miles on regular daily bus routes and nearly 22,000 miles on “non-route” transportation such as field trips and activity trips. An average of 200.4 students were transported on our routes each day, with an annual average cost per transported pupil of $1,261.71.
This might sound like a lot of miles and a very high cost per student, because it is. The G-R district includes 189 square miles of total land area, and our students are distributed among four rural counties. Many other large rural districts are in a similar situation. My other district (North Tama: 155 square miles) is in a similar situation, spending about $1,210 per transported student last year.
Compare this to a district like the Marion Independent School district which has a total land area of 3.6 square miles. That district’s annual average cost per pupil transported last year was $517.57. In the West Burlington district (land area: 2 square miles), the average per-student cost was $532.86.
Statistically speaking, school buses are the safest way for the district to transport hundreds of students to and from school and on their various activity trips; furthermore, Iowa school districts are required by law to provide free transportation for any elementary student living 2 or more miles from the school and any secondary student living 3 or more miles from the school.
In some urban and suburban districts with a higher population density, a bus can travel three or four miles and be filled to capacity, while in some rural districts a bus can travel three or four miles and only stop for the occasional stop sign. Here at Gladbrook-Reinbeck, we were able to reduce from six bus routes two years ago to five routes last year, and again from five routes to four this year. We’re doing our best to make our transportation system as efficient and effective as possible so more of our funding can be used to provide educational opportunities for students.
Either way you look at it, this situation is inequitable. A student who lives in Gladbrook should have access to the same educational opportunities as a student from Waterloo, Waukee, or West Des Moines. But the only way to ensure that would be for there to be some sort of separate funding source outside of a district’s per-pupil funding to pay for transportation costs. Transportation equity legislation was proposed during the 2017 legislative session, but the legislation wasn’t supported…primarily because it would just be so expensive to provide the equity that districts like Gladbrook-Reinbeck need and deserve.
Consider asking your elected representatives their feelings about this transportation equity issue. I still believe the Iowa legislature should be asked to provide an additional funding stream for transportation, or use a formula based on population density when determining Supplemental State Aid.
Perhaps you saw the recent news story on KWWL News called “Taken for a Ride” which looked on this topic in depth, focusing on the Western Dubuque Community School District which is Iowa’s largest at 555 square miles. Yes, that’s where I got the title for this column – and I believe it is an appropriate title because there truly are many students and school districts that are being “Taken for a Ride.” The video portion of the story has now been taken down from the KWWL website, but you can read the associated article here: https://tinyurl.com/Taken4aRide
Our rural students represent the future of Iowa. No matter where they live, they deserve equal access to a top-notch school experience! Each and every one of them deserves a quality education regardless of whether they live in one of Iowa’s large metro areas, a growing suburb, or in a rural area that may be losing population.
You are welcome to visit my blog at http://rebelsupt.blogspot.com/ where this column and all of the columns I have written for the Northern Sun Print and Reinbeck Courier are posted. You are also welcome to follow me on Twitter, where my handle is @DavidRobertHill.