Mickey'snewestfan
DIS Veteran
- Joined
- Apr 26, 2005
- Messages
- 4,719
Thanks everyone!
I actually did a little research, and it turns out that Grandma's on our same bus route. We both live in relatively large apartment complexes so there will undoubtedly be tons of kids getting on/off at each stop (the route has 3 stops, and I'm pretty sure they fill at 60 seat bus). Anyway, I'm not asking them to add another stop to the route or to let him off somewhere different. Grandma (my mom) is just 2 blocks from a subway stop so he could use that stop when he needs to get to the train. Hopefully they'll let him have blanket permission to get off at either my stop or that stop. Since it's the same bus, I don't imagine the issue of it being full will come up.
As far as things like not letting the off if there's no car, or written permission for each day, or dividing into walkers/car people -- do those things still apply in middle school? I was actually at the school at dismissal one day and it seemed as though the doors just opened up and kids walked out, and either climbed onto a bus, got in a car, hopped on a bike or walked home. It didn't seem as organized as elementary school dismissals, with carpool lines, "walkers/riders", bus numbers being called etc . . . Does that seem right?
I actually did a little research, and it turns out that Grandma's on our same bus route. We both live in relatively large apartment complexes so there will undoubtedly be tons of kids getting on/off at each stop (the route has 3 stops, and I'm pretty sure they fill at 60 seat bus). Anyway, I'm not asking them to add another stop to the route or to let him off somewhere different. Grandma (my mom) is just 2 blocks from a subway stop so he could use that stop when he needs to get to the train. Hopefully they'll let him have blanket permission to get off at either my stop or that stop. Since it's the same bus, I don't imagine the issue of it being full will come up.
As far as things like not letting the off if there's no car, or written permission for each day, or dividing into walkers/car people -- do those things still apply in middle school? I was actually at the school at dismissal one day and it seemed as though the doors just opened up and kids walked out, and either climbed onto a bus, got in a car, hopped on a bike or walked home. It didn't seem as organized as elementary school dismissals, with carpool lines, "walkers/riders", bus numbers being called etc . . . Does that seem right?