How are bus stops determined?
Bus routes are designed with buses traveling along main roads and picking up students at centralized locations. Whenever possible, stops are placed at corners or intersections that are central to the homes they serve. Some house stops are added on very busy roads or long streets. Younger students generally receive stops closer to home, while older students may be expected to walk farther.
Why are bus stops usually established at corners or intersections?
Corner stops are preferred for several important safety and operational reasons:
- Students are taught to cross at corners, not mid-block.
- Traffic controls (stop signs, signals) are typically located at intersections, making drivers more cautious.
- Other motorists expect buses to stop at corners, reducing the risk of illegal passing—the greatest danger to students.
- Corner stops give drivers enough distance to activate the yellow warning lights before stopping.
- Drivers, especially substitutes, can identify corners more easily than house numbers, which are often hard to see in poor visibility.
How does efficiency affect bus stop locations?
Keeping buses on main roads shortens student ride times and makes it easier to adjust routes for new riders. Minimizing the number of stops also reduces fuel costs and bus wear. Corner stops allow buses to operate more efficiently and safely.
How are pickup and drop-off order determined?
The sequence of stops is planned to be the most time-efficient. Students who are picked up first in the morning are not always dropped off first in the afternoon if it requires an inefficient route. Generally, students who live farther from school will have longer ride times. Ride length is influenced by distance and number of stops, so routes aim to keep stops limited and usually at corners.
What criteria are considered when establishing a bus stop?
Transportation staff evaluate multiple factors, including:
- Walking distance: Students may be expected to walk up to 0.25 miles to a stop unless the street layout requires more.
- Street crossings: Whether a student must cross a busy road (speed limit over 30 mph and more than 100 cars per hour).
- Turn-arounds: Whether the bus must turn around at the stop location, and whether the maneuver is safe and reasonable.
- Eligibility zone: Students living 1.5 miles or less from their assigned school (non-transportation zone) are not eligible for busing.
What factors are not used to determine or justify a new bus stop?
Certain conditions do not qualify a location for a house stop or additional stop:
- Visibility from home: Corner stops may not be visible from nearby houses, but this is expected. Families are encouraged to accompany children at stops.
- Passing the student’s house: Buses commonly pass homes without stopping; frequent stops create safety hazards due to impatient motorists.
- Number of riders: A house stop is not added simply because only one student uses the corner stop—others may be assigned but ride infrequently.
- Sidewalk availability: Lack of sidewalks, common in McHenry School District 15, does not justify creating a new stop.
- Weather conditions: Weather is not considered when determining permanent stop locations.