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NYC School Bus Strike to Begin Wednesday

Students and some parents will be given temporary MetroCards to get to class.

New York City's public school bus drivers will go on strike beginning Wednesday, the union announced Monday afternoon.

Some 8,000 bus drivers and matrons of Local 1181 of the Amalgamated Transit Union have been threatening to strike for weeks over the issue of job protection. 

The strike will require the parents of 152,000 students to find a new way to get their children to school.

The city will provide temporary MetroCards for students currently taking the bus, as well as for parents of kids in grades K-2. If public transportation is not an option, parents of elementary school children can get reimbursed for travel costs. See the DOE's full set of rules here.

One benefit: kids who come up to two hours late due to travel issues will be excused. 

The crux of the dispute is job protection. In December, the city invited private companies to bid to take over the 1,100 routes that serve students with disabilities, about a sixth of the total. There is currently no protection for drivers on those routes, who fear they will be unemployed once the new contracts take effect in June, according to the New York Times

Mayor Michael Bloomberg said the new contracts will save the city $95 million over five years and that requiring private contractors to hire the current drivers is barred by a 2011 ruling that said it would violate the city's competitive bidding laws. The union said the 2011 ruling was flawed and claims that the mayor's office hasn't put adequate time into negotiations, only spending a total of 1 hour and 20 minutes in talks, according to the ABC News.

In a statement following the announcement, Mayor Michael Bloomberg called the union's decision "regrettable."

"Let me be clear: the union’s decision to strike has nothing to do with safety and everything to do with job protections that the City legally cannot include in its bus contracts. We hope that the union will reconsider its irresponsible and misguided decision to jeopardize our students’ education," he said.

The last time the city's school bus drivers and matrons (a second staffer who accompanies kids on the bus) held a strike was in 1979, when the walked off the job for 13 weeks, according to the Times.

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MFEnrique May 20, 2013 at 12:26 am
Chris Rock said it best, African Americans are shown more 'love' for doing a 'bid' and getting outRead More of prison than to graduate school with a degree. When this 'hood mentality' starts to change, then you will see more than a trickle of AA passing advanced math courses.