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Florida Charter School Conference Orlando, November 20, 2013 Presented by Charlie Hood Ensuring Transportation Success: Staying in Compliance AND Doing.

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Presentation on theme: "Florida Charter School Conference Orlando, November 20, 2013 Presented by Charlie Hood Ensuring Transportation Success: Staying in Compliance AND Doing."— Presentation transcript:

1 Florida Charter School Conference Orlando, November 20, 2013 Presented by Charlie Hood Ensuring Transportation Success: Staying in Compliance AND Doing What Works

2 First things first… Your LEA transportation persons are your best resource. Also, FDOE Offices of Charter Schools and Transportation (SCHTRANS@fldoe.org, or, 850-245-9795)

3 Resources – Student Transportation Survey General Instructions – Quality Links- Florida School District Transportation Profiles – Charter Schools Transportation Resource Guide – Florida School Bus Safety Inspection Manual – Florida School Bus Specifications – Florida Basic School Bus Operators Curriculum

4 Websites and Contacts – http://www.fldoe.org/fefp/fteinstr.asp http://www.fldoe.org/fefp/fteinstr.asp – http://www.fldoe.org/fefp / http://www.fldoe.org/fefp / – www.fldoe.org/transportation www.fldoe.org/transportation – www.FAPTFlorida.org www.FAPTFlorida.org – FDOE School Transportation: schtrans@fldoe.org; (850) 245-9795 schtrans@fldoe.org – Charlie.Hood@fldoe.org; (850) 245-9924 Charlie.Hood@fldoe.org

5 Floridas Numbers (2012-13) 1.01 million public school students transported (approx. 38% of enrollment) 14,445 buses in daily service 311,056 school bus stops (2011-12) 273 million total miles (2011-12) $420M FEFP reimbursement $359 per base student from FEFP $1,382 per ESE student from FEFP

6 Transported Charter Students (eligible students, from 2012-13, February Survey) 43,878 transported in school buses 95 in school cars or small vehicles 7,507 in public transit 346 in private cars 51,826 total transported (25% of enrollment) 151,224 not claimed for transportation 51,306 Non-weighted 520 Weighted

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8 Transportation Provisions (s.1002.33) –Transportation of charter school students shall be provided by the charter school consistent with the requirements of subpart I.E. of chapter 1006 and s. 1012.45. The governing body of the charter school may provide transportation through an agreement or contract with the district school board, a private provider, or parents. The charter school and the sponsor shall cooperate in making arrangements that ensure that transportation is not a barrier to equal access for all students residing within a reasonable distance of the charter school as determined in its charter.

9 Transportation Safety (excerpt) –Section 1002.33 (16)(a) EXEMPTION FROM STATUTES –…However, a charter school shall be in compliance with the following statutes in chapters 1000-1013: 5. Those statutes pertaining to student health, safety, and welfare.

10 Sections of Law and Rule Sections 1006.21-.27, FS- Student Transportation Chapter 6A-3, FAC- Student Transportation Section 1012.32 and 1012.465, FS- Qualifications of Personnel (Criminal Background Checks) Section 1012.45, FS- School Bus Driver Training, Physicals, and Qualifications

11 Other Sections of Law and Rule Section 1011.68, FS- Funds for Student Transportation Section 316.172, FS- Traffic to Stop for School Bus Section 316.183, FS- Unlawful Speed (including School Buses) Section 316.6145, FS- School Buses; Safety Belts or Other Restraint Systems Required

12 Transportation Service Options Charter school owns and operates school buses School district provides school buses Private contractors provide school buses School or district provides certain smaller vehicles for isolated or disabled students Public transit Parent owned vehicles for isolated or disabled students (if needed)

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15 Standard Type C Bus

16 Transportation Safety Requirements (Chapter 1006, F.S. and Chapter 6A-3, FAC) Transportation required two miles or more; maximum 1.5 miles to bus stop Routes must be designated; stops established in most reasonably safe locations School buses required, not full size vans or other vehicles over 10 passenger capacity Buses meeting Florida specs, inspected each 30 school days

17 School Bus Requirements School buses must: – meet Federal Motor Vehicle Safety Standards – meet Florida School Bus Specifications – be inspected at least each 30 school days by an inspector certified by the Department – meet inspection pass/fail criteria per the Florida School Bus Safety Inspection Manual – be removed from service until deficiencies are corrected

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20 Safety of Buses vs. Other Modes

21 School Bus Occupant Protection

22 The Driver is the Key to Safety School bus operators (drivers) must have: – 40 hours pre-service training, including 20 hours from the Basic School Bus Operators Curriculum – 8 hours in-service annually – criminal background checks – drug and alcohol testing – annual physical examination, per ESE 479 form – dexterity exam – Commercial Driver License – driving history checks

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24 Transportation Safety Requirements Safety training/procedures must be provided by public schools for bus riders: – emergency evacuation drills first six weeks of each semester; FAA-style safety and evacuation instructions at beginning of each field/activity trip – transported students must receive instruction in safe riding practices during first six weeks of first semester – schools must ensure safety of school bus and parent loading/unloading areas and bicyclists/pedestrians

25 Basic Eligibility for Transportation Service All K-12 students > 2 miles walking distance Students with disabilities as specified in IEP and consistent with Transportation General Instructions All teen parent program participants Elementary grade hazardous walking

26 Reasonable Distance Provision Section 1002.33: The charter school and the sponsor shall cooperate in making arrangements that ensure that transportation is not a barrier to equal access for all students residing within a reasonable distance of the charter school as determined in its charter. Reasonable distance can be determined based on comparable local practice for traditional public schools

27 Funding Starts with annual Legislative Appropriation Distributed per Transportation Funding Formula (Section 1011.68, FS) Claimed by school district via Automated Reporting System Recalculated throughout year as data is updated (from new surveys, district amendments, audit adjustments)

28 Estimating Transportation Cost Determine local school district transportation cost per student Determine charter school transportation cost per student (may be higher) Cost will depend on numerous variables that should be discussed/included prior to signing sponsor agreement

29 Estimating Transportation Cost Variables affecting cost include: – Lead time to school opening (buses, drivers) – Location of school – Location of students – Opening/closing (bell) times of school – Reasonable distance boundary established – Special needs of students – Mix of grade levels on buses – Compatibility with existing routes

30 Estimating State Reimbursement Students eligible for transportation funding will generate districts formula-calculated annual per student reimbursement Same per student reimbursement rate, regardless of mode (e.g., parent car, public transit, school bus) State reimbursement rate rarely covers cost Estimating worksheet available from DOE

31 Claiming State Reimbursement Riders (bus enrollment) surveyed in July, October, February, June (Surveys 1, 2, 3, 4) Students must be eligible for transportation funding (including parent-transported if isolated or disabled) Auditor General requires data collection worksheets, other documentation Funding claims must be submitted by districts and funding is distributed to them

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35 Contract Compliance Monitoring Self-evaluation worksheets available from FDOE for monitoring safety compliance Includes core safety requirements District sponsors are required to monitor contract compliance by charter schools, including compliance with safety laws and rules

36 The Pitfalls: Non-conforming vehicles (e.g., vans, shuttle buses) Non-Florida school buses (e.g., other states) Drivers or bus inspectors not fully qualified Failing to account for transportation cost SAFETY costs more, but only on the front end Failing to claim eligible transported students #1 pitfall: lack of planning and lead time

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38 QUESTIONS???


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