Wednesday, March 10, 2010

Yellow Peril

When the School Corporation sneezes, the City catches cold.

One step the school board could take to ameliorate the funding mess is faces is to downsize or eliminate the large school bus program.

The City faces two problems related to the transportation system currently in place, ie., transporting of students via buses owned and operated by the school corporation:

1. It is a costly service which subsidizes the choice of some parents to live in non-walkable neighborhoods, which causes the well-planned inner city neighborhoods to further deteriorate as essential services such as neighborhood schools are eliminated. This degrades the general quality of life within the older neighborhoods of town, and the entire community suffers.

2. The Transit Authority of River City (TARC) is being forced by a variety of factors to cut service throughout its service area, including New Albany. Because of these cuts the already meager bus system is pushed closer to the brink. The city is deprived of a viable system of public transportation, such a system can benefit the the community at large through greater access for all its citizens, better air quality and a residential pattern. Such a pattern allows the city to operate more efficiently as infrastucture is used to its greatest advantage, rather than having it spread thin in a costly advance toward the the sprawling edges of the community.

If the school corporation would eliminate the school bus program and instead rely on non-corporation-owned buses, it should realize a sizable savings. If TARC were presented with a daily cadre of student bus riders it would go a long way toward building a base of ridership to rationalize a comprehensive general public transportaion system for the entire community. The transportaion system would benefit the community as a whole and the presevation and revitalization of inner city schools would, likewise, benefit the community as a whole. The savings would allow the school corporation to focus its funds on its true mission --educating students, enriching the community, ensuring a sound future for our city-- which is a better use of scarce educational funds.

4 comments:

Jeff Gillenwater said...

You're on exactly the right path here, John. I republished at NAC for wider distribution. I hope you don't mind.

shirley baird said...

I could not agree more. When I was a child, waaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaay back when, we rode city buses to school. We need to have a return of mass transit.

Iamhoosier said...

Heck, I used to have to walk uphill both ways to school and back!

I like this idea. Killing two birds with one stone.

John Gonder said...

Iamhoosier:

I've been to Tell City. I know what you mean.