Forest Area plans bus safety programs

From staff reports

On Wednesday, Oct. 18, the 21st annual Operation Safe Stop will be conducted in communities across Pennsylvania as part of National School Bus Safety Week, which runs Oct. 16 through Oct. 20.

In conjunction with National School Bus Safety Week, bus evacuation drills were conducted in September at Forest Area Schools. The district is also promoting bus safety awareness with assemblies and individual classroom projects.

Operation Safe Stop is a public awareness and enforcement effort to educate motorists passing a stopped school bus, when children are loading or unloading, is both dangerous and illegal.

Each year, through Operation Safe Stop, law enforcement agencies, school transportation providers, pupil transportation associations and Pennsylvania Department of Transpiration have combined their efforts to raise public awareness about the potential consequences and reduce the occurrence of illegal school bus passes.

Pennsylvania’s school bus stopping law requires motorists to stop at least ten feet away from school buses that have their red lights flashing and stop arm extended. Motorists must stop when they are behind the bus, meeting the bus or approaching an intersection where a bus is stopped.

Motorists following or traveling alongside a school bus must also stop until the red lights have stopped flashing, the stop arm is withdrawn, and all children have reached safety. If physical barriers such as grassy medians, guide rails or concrete median barriers separate oncoming traffic from the bus, motorists in the opposing lanes may proceed without stopping.