Why do you think you're (general you) more important? What is so urgent that you can't get to work a few mins later?
If you know the bus schedule leave earlier, later or take a different route.
Easy enough.
Around here, no, buses do not pull over ~ because they shouldn't have to.
No because the kids would never get to school.
When I was an officer in New Hampshire back in the 1980's we could ticket (and did) school bus drivers that did not pull over if they had more than six cars behind them.
In most cases the bus could pull over and let the cars by in about a minute, maybe two. I can't see how kids being on the bus for that much longer is harmful.Also, from a parent's point of view, I wouldn't want my child to be sitting on a schoolbus full of kids for extra time. Not only does it mean that my kid had to leave earlier or get to school later (the amount of time it takes those hundreds of cars to pass the bus) but that's time with unsupervised kids (except the bus driver, of course) who have nothing to do but sit and get on each other's nerves. No thanks!!!!!
When I was an officer in New Hampshire back in the 1980's we could ticket (and did) school bus drivers that did not pull over if they had more than six cars behind them.
Another thought is would people really be looking for that 'stop' sign. I would fear that going around the bus would become a standard and they would forget to watch for the 'stop' sign on the bus and a child would get hurt in the end.
I don't know about requiring it but the school buses in my area DO pull over and let cars pass.
I vote no for the reason that kids are standing out in all types of weather waiting on that school bus, as well as some parents waiting to leave for work. For them to pull over it means that the bus schedule will change from day to day. In our area the buses run to the minute, 99% of the time. You can set your clock by them. We experiences that 1% of the time today, when they were 10 minutes late and DDs started to get worried they missed the bus. I decided to drive them to school.
Another thought is would people really be looking for that 'stop' sign. I would fear that going around the bus would become a standard and they would forget to watch for the 'stop' sign on the bus and a child would get hurt in the end.
Just to clarify. This post IN NO WAY suggest passing buses, not stoping for buses when their lights are on or anything else which would endanger the lives of children or anyone else.School buses run on a schedule. Pulling over to allow 'hundreds' of cars to pass would blow that schedule every day and get children to school late. If these roads have that much traffic, it's also dangerous to create a scenario where large buses are pulled off on a narrow berm and many, impatient drivers are trying to pass. Setting a precendent by pulling over could create a very dangerous situation sometime when cars decide to pass a bus on a rural two lane road and find traffic coming the other way. Take a different route, leave at a different time, be patient. It's the law in every state that cars wait as buses pickup. Children get hit by impatient drivers who think they know best and pass buses. We've had two children killed in Ohio this school year by impatient drivers. Don't be one.
Wow! Kids in your area wait outside for the bus???? In the weather??????
Here, most kids wait inside the house or in heated car, driven to the stop by a parent. In no case do the children prepare for getting on the bus until it has come to a complete stop. That's when kid puts on his/her jacket, shoes, grabs booksack and then makes his/her path to the bus. Always at a very careful rate of speed. Never running, no, no, no. Then, once the precious darling is on the bus, s/he must choose a seat very carefully. Once that process is complete, the bus can finally begin to move, always allowing the parent who was driving the "wait-mobile" to pull out first, if applicable.
And there don't seem to be "bus-stops". We are in a rural area. The bus stop for each kid or family is at that family's front door....
School buses run on a schedule. Pulling over to allow 'hundreds' of cars to pass would blow that schedule every day and get children to school late. If these roads have that much traffic, it's also dangerous to create a scenario where large buses are pulled off on a narrow berm and many, impatient drivers are trying to pass. Setting a precendent by pulling over could create a very dangerous situation sometime when cars decide to pass a bus on a rural two lane road and find traffic coming the other way. Take a different route, leave at a different time, be patient. It's the law in every state that cars wait as buses pickup. Children get hit by impatient drivers who think they know best and pass buses. We've had two children killed in Ohio this school year by impatient drivers. Don't be one.