Wednesday, January 21, 2015

From Moncton, New Brunswick: Bus Story # 2 from Bill Jarvis


Bill Jarvis drove a bus for 25 years in Moncton, New Brunswick. He shared this winter bus story with me in a recent email, and when I asked, gave me permission to post it in This Week’s Featured Story.


At Tours to Remember Inc./Metro School Bus Service, Moncton, New Brunswick, the 5 highway coaches lived in the heated garage when not on the road. The 45 school buses were kept outdoors in a fenced and locked compound.

Len was a driver for many years. He had a regular school bus route carrying special needs children, and drove charters as well.

One bitterly cold, windy Sunday morning (temperature about minus 30ÂșC) Len had a charter with a school bus. When he tried to open the padlock on the gate, the key would not turn. Thinking the lock was frozen, he tried warming it in his bare hands, then tried turning the key harder. It broke off.

Next, he went in the garage. The door the drivers used was next to the bus entrance, with the wash-bay immediately inside it. Len got a hacksaw from the tool room, and went back to cut the lock. With a hardened Viro padlock, that was slow work. Len never wore a hat, and he was very  cold. By the time he got the lock cut, he was late for his charter. He returned the hacksaw to the toolroom.  As he was leaving the garage, he glanced at a school bus sitting in the wash bay. It was the bus he had been assigned for the charter. The cleaners had left it there for him, so it would be warm and easy to start. This was the fourth time he had walked by it.

 The next day at home, Len found out why the key broke. It was the key to his shed.

Sunday, January 18, 2015

From Toronto: “Bus(ted),” by an anonymous bus driver for the website Not Always Right


(A woman enters the bus with her son.)

Me: “Excuse me, ma’am. Your son didn’t pay the fare.”

Customer: “But children are free!”

(Read more here.)

Sunday, January 11, 2015

From NYC: "Finding the Bus With the Backpack," by Julia E. Whitworth for the New York Times


Dear Diary:

Today, I win at urban parenting.

I realize at preschool drop-off that my 3-year-old has left her backpack with her most beloved stuffed animal on the city bus we took to get there. (Read more here.)

Sunday, January 4, 2015

From Seattle: "Let Us Not Judge, That We Might Not be Judged Ourselves," by Nathan Voss


These two were not students attending accredited universities. They were not educated businessmen. They were street people...(Read the whole story here.)

Thursday, January 1, 2015

Busboy's Annual Pass: Was It Worth It? Spreadsheet for December.




35 boardings marks my lowest monthly total rides for the year. We had grandchildren (and their parents) in for the last 12 days of the month. We had two possible bus trips planned with the grandkids, but time knocked out one, and very nasty weather the other. Still, I ended up in the black, with a $4.75 “profit.” See below for the cumulative totals since January 1 last year.




You can find out what this is all about here.