Boston City Councilors ordered up a hearing today at which to press Boston school officials to explain how the new BPS Zum (pronounced "zoom," but for obvious reasons not spelled that way) app that was supposed to make BPS buses run as softly as a cloud instead led to some buses not showing up in the morning for an hour or more - and some kids riding buses home for up to three hours as their poor, befuddled drivers tried to navigate Boston's dropped-bowl-of-spaghetti roads.
Councilor Ed Flynn (South Boston, South End, Chinatown, Downtown), said he was leaving a meeting - having nothing to do with the buses - at the Quincy School in Chinatown at 7 p.m. on Monday when he ran into a woman from Roxbury who'd just gotten out of an Uber because her child was still at the school, waiting for a bus that never came after school let out at 4 p.m. He said he heard from one parent whose child was two hours late getting from Dorchester to South Boston - and that at the end, the child had to give directions to the bus driver.
Flynn cited a Globe report that only 34% of buses were on time on the first day of school last week - down from 61% last year and the worst on-time performance in nearly a decade.
"We cannot accept this is just what normally happens" at the start of the school year, he said. Councilors said it was particularly critical to get it right this year, because it's the third and final year of a state-mandated improvement cycle after which state education officials say they will consider whether to take control of Boston schools - and that one of the criteria is simply getting kids to school on time.
Councilor Erin Murphy (at large) said she's heard from several parent who were still waiting for their kids at 7:30 p.m. Councilor Julia Mejia (at large) said she's dipped into her own money to reimburse parents forced to retrieve their kids by Uber.
Councilor Enrique Pepén (Hyde Park, Roslindale, Mattapan), who cited his own BPS horror reports - such as an hour-ride bus trip from the Channing School to River Street in Mattapan, about two miles away - said he visited the BPS transportation department this week - and the home of a BPS bus driver - and said the one brief, flickering light is that after 50 years of using paper maps, in more recent years, printed out via the old Mapquest site, BPS has finally committed to a "state of the art new app."
The problem, he said, is that drivers are still getting used to the Zum system, which is supposed to give them better guidance on their routes - and let parents track the position of the buses and their kids. BPS should have done more training before school started, both with parents and especially drivers, not just on the general use of the app, but on the specific routes the drivers would be taking, he said.
BPS, he said, "is supposed to be the best public-school system in the country" and he said he's confident BPS and drivers can work it out, eventually, even if they should have had it right on the first day.
"Our parents deserve, this, our families deserve this, our schools deserve this," he said.
One parent with a young child at the Ohrenberger School in West Roxbury described the first three days of school, in e-mail to Universal Hub:
The first day of school, the bus driver asked my daughter if she was Lucas and couldn’t tell me what school he was going to. According to the new app Zum, he drove in circles, even entering Brookline at one point.
And today was the 3rd afternoon where my child’s bus just didn’t show up on the app or at school. Parents are stressed, poor Principals are staying late with stranded kids.
How is that okay? No acknowledgement from BPS, Transportation, the Mayor…
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Comments
It’s really disgraceful.
By Jiggles
Thu, 09/12/2024 - 8:10am
In the first 5 days, the bus that takes my kids home has been more than 90 minutes late 3 times. On time it was 3 hours late. The hold times for BPS transportation center are quite long and you can’t reach anyone in the office to coordinate pickup at the school. So you’re forced to just head to school and hope the bus doesn’t show up before you.
It’s really poorly managed and I’m afraid BPS is just a broken organization.
BPS parent here, with 13 years of experience with the buses
By BikeBoston45
Thu, 09/12/2024 - 8:51am
Among my 3 kids, I've had an elementary schooler (or 2 at a time) on the schoolbus for 13 years. Back in 2012-2015, when I lived in the South End, the buses my kids were on were fairly reliable--occasional late days when there was massive traffic, etc., but unremarkably fine. Starting in 2016, when I moved to JP, I had a massively different experience: maybe something changed with how BPS planned/staffed routes then, but maybe also the smaller neighborhood streets were at play--at any rate, I think my JP experience is more typical of others' experiences as well.
Every schoolyear from 2016 through 2023, I'd be waiting for my kids for 30, 60, even 120 minutes after the posted arrival time at the end of the day. It was insane. Calls to BPS did nothing. Calls to the school did nothing. Yes, I'd take the subway to the school to pick them up when buses hadn't arrived and it was 60+ minutes after school dismissed. Every single year, this all worked itself out by Thanksgiving, occasionally by the end of October, but it was 3 months of pain and agony and exhausted kids who desperately needed the bathroom and were starving when they got off the bus at 6:30!
Last year, BPS finally started texting when that was going to happen, so at like 1pm I'd get a text saying "We have no bus driver for your afternoon route!" and I'd make plans to drop everything at work and go to the school for pickup.
This year (still living in JP), I know it's only been a week, but my kid is getting home AT the time the bus is supposed to arrive, or 5 minutes before. It is a shocking and dramatic difference.
I am not discounting the experiences of families who are having awful times this year, but Zum definitely changed something, I would 100% agree. I don't know how they fixed our route and screwed up so many others, but this should be a solvable problem without waiting for drivers to have 3 months of experience on the routes.
Maybe this explains
By WalkingTheDog
Thu, 09/12/2024 - 9:12am
The short bus trying to turn around on my street yesterday afternoon. Fortunately for the driver, there were no other vehicles parked on the street, but he was trying to back into the parking lot just beyond the white car in the Google street view.
More outsourcing
By Kaz
Thu, 09/12/2024 - 1:35pm
So, we've outsourced our student busing to an Uber-wannabe (that has a track record of being fucking awful at its job)?
Cool.
I can't wait until the students have to Yum (outsourced-school-DoorDash app...said "yoom") their school lunches and we find out those drivers are eating the cardboard square pizzas and leaving the empty bags on the school's steps.
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