NO SCHOOL<------------------
No school today so I am going to chill out and appreciate the day!
NO SCHOOL<------------------
No school today so I am going to chill out and appreciate the day!
OSWEGO — Voters approved a property tax increase Tuesday that will keep the Oswego School District from slashing numerous programs and staff.
The referendum request for a 30 cent tax increase was approved by about 54 percent of the more than 8,700 votes cast.
Whoo hoo the referendum passed and I get to keep my job. So ha ha all you doubters who took off all your sick days thinking you won't have a job!!! I am just happy that my town is putting th kids first. Growth means change and change takes money. So the children of Oswego School District 308 get to keep their programs and I get to keep my JOB!!!
The nice thing about working for a school district is you get all their holidays, teacher days, 1/2 days, 5 hour days...you get the picture, off. Some of the days like 5 hour days are more work for us, but in the end I like it.
Monday is President's day so we are off, but we have a non paid CPR class scheduled and I am going. You never know when you will need to know CPR. It will be a good investment of my time.
Yesterday the week ended fine. You certainly can tell Spring is approaching as my Junior High kids decided to have a bread fight on the way home. One kid had a bag of bread from some sort of school party and he decided to pitch it at a girl. The fight ensued and bread went everywhere. I pulled off the road...and said "HEY GUYS!! I want to be able to go home tonight too, I really don't want to spend the night crawling around under the seats looking for bread. SO CLEAN IT UP!!" They did, I only ended up sweeping crumbs and one big peice. KIDS!! I rarely write up conduct reports on kids...except for major safety issues like smoking. I am not a push over, but I understand kids...they are basically all the same. Just that KIDS!
Otherwise I am going to enjoy my weekend...til then drive safe...
Romeoville High: Students praised for quick action; woman critical
By Catherine Ann Velasco STAFF WRITER
ROMEOVILLE — Romeoville High School student Chris Kowal remembers saying good morning to his bus driver as he climbed on board Wednesday morning. About 15 seconds later, he saw her fall to the floor.
"I was taking out my flash cards for Spanish. She reached over to pull the door open and fell. I ran toward her," he said, dropping his flash cards.
While picking up students about 7:10 a.m. Wednesday, bus driver Phyllis Stoklosa of Romeoville, a longtime Valley View School District employee, went into cardiac arrest while picking up Romeoville High School students at Six Pines Drive and Naperville Road in Romeoville. Seventeen students were on the bus at the time, said Russell Fletcher, community relations specialist for the district.
Students came to her aid — one called 911 on her cell phone, and Kowal reached the transportation center by bus intercom. After treatment at the scene, Stoklosa was transported to Edward Hospital, where she was listed in critical but stable condition Thursday night.
"I'm glad it didn't happen when she was driving," Kowal said. "It was like the movies. My first reaction was that someone is falling off the step. Then I saw her on the floor.
"I looked behind the bus and saw a car. I told (the students waiting outside to get on the bus) to go get an adult quickly," Kowal recalled.
Meanwhile, he reached the school district's dispatch, who talked him through safety steps, making sure the bus had its emergency brakes on, which it did.
The adult in the car behind the bus stayed with the students and helped hold Stoklosa's head until paramedics arrived.
'Quick response' James Mitchem, principal at Romeoville High School, was very proud of the students. "The paramedics said their quick response afforded them enough time for paramedics to save her life," Mitchem said. "If she had been in that state for a long time, she may not have survived. "They didn't panic. They just took action, and that was great," he said.
Mitchem said Stoklosa was at the route's last bus stop when she collapsed. He credits Stoklosa for following procedure and putting the bus in neutral and putting the emergency brake on at the stop.
"The driver should be commended. It would have been easy to step on the brake and open the door," Mitchem said.
Students were later recognized over the school's public-address system. Mitchem said some doctors want to give the students a lunch.
Romeoville Mayor Fred Dewald, who works in the transportation department for Valley View, said during Wednesday night's village board meeting that he plans to honor the students at a future meeting.
"We are very, very proud of the students on the bus. They took exceptional steps," said Derrick Berlin, assistant transportation director for special services.
Berlin said students practice bus evacuation drills twice a year. They are taught how to evacuate a bus when there is a fire or an accident. They are also taught how to use the intercom and how to secure the bus, such as checking to see if the emergency brake is on.
Veteran driver Berlin described Stoklosa as a kind and caring woman who has worked for the district for 25 1/2 years.
She is currently the longest-serving driver in the Valley View transportation department, having started her career in October 1979. She has trained innumerable bus drivers during her service in the department, Fletcher said.
"I've been here about 10 months, and in the first couple of weeks she made window curtains for my office all on her own," Berlin said. "Everybody loves her. She is a very, very pleasant, wonderful lady that everyone gravitates to."
Stunned students Bethany Benigno, 14, a freshman, was the first to reach emergency personnel on her cell phone.
"She was always cheerful," Benigno said about Stoklosa. "She would give us candy canes for Christmas and bookmarks all the time."
After the paramedics came, the school district sent another bus to take the students to school, where they met with counselors in the auditorium.
"Everyone was kind of freaked out about seeing something like that," Benigno said.
Students were given a choice to go home or go to their classes. She decided to stay in school.
"There was no real point of going home," she said.
Kowal is still stunned by what happened.
"That's a life-changing experience. Anything can happen in any moment of life. Fifteen seconds could be the moment of living and dying," Kowal said. "You don't know what can happen."
Cathy Velasco can be reached at (815) 729-6051 or via e-mailat cvelasco@scn1.com.
02/18/05
My little ones were all a flutter with hearts and candy offerings to this bus driver...it was so extra sweet. THEN came the after school sugar high...ew! Shaking rattly children boarded my bus with overstuffed boxes decorated with candy hearts...WOW! Thankfully it was a short ride to their homes....except to the daycare that I drop at ... they had another party waiting...wonder how many of them will make it to dinner after they drop following their sugar drop!
Oh well, The day of LOVE only comes once a year!
SPRINGFIELD, Ill. (AP) - An Illinois lawmaker has introduced a bill that would require school buses to be equipped with seat belts, despite resistance from school officials who say buses are safe without the restraints.
The bill, sponsored by State Rep. Lou Lang, D-Skokie, would require all new school buses in the state to have safety belts. Existing buses would not have to be retrofitted under the proposal.
Lang, who has unsuccessfully sponsored similar bills in the past, said the high, padded seats in school buses generally do a good job protecting kids from injury in front- and rear-end crashes, but don't prevent injuries from side-impact accidents.
"In a side collision, you don't go straight forward or straight back, you get thrown to the side and become a human missile," Lang said Monday.
Lang said he thinks recent school bus crashes might sway members to support the measure this year, citing an August 2003 bus crash in southern Illinois that killed a 14-year-old girl. Shawna Ward died and 15 students and their driver were injured when the bus skidded off a two-lane country road and plunged halfway down a 40-foot ravine near Vandalia, about 70 miles northeast of St. Louis.
But some state education officials said strapping school kids into their seats could pose other dangers, such as hampering their ability to quickly exit a bus in an emergency.
"Seat belts don't necessarily increase safety. In fact, they pose safety risks," said Charlie McBarron, communications director for the Illinois Education Association.
Becky Watts, spokeswoman for the Illinois State Board of Education, cited a 2001 study from the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration that found lap or shoulder belts are not safer than existing bus designs.
"The cons outweigh the pros" of requiring seat belts in school buses, Watts said.
But other studies from the administration have concluded that existing school bus seats do not protect passengers in side-impact crashes and rollovers.
Lang said he would like to require all school buses to be retrofitted with lap and shoulder belts, but he said it would be too cost prohibitive to win support from lawmakers.
The bill is expected to be taken up by the House Transportation Committee this week, Lang said.
02/07/05 16:11 EST
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Most folks would think because we do require our children to be seat belted in our personal vehicles that it would be natural to require them to be seat belted in a school bus. Actually, pre school, early childhood, and special needs children are belted for their safety. BUT as I said before a bus full of say 40 elementary children that would either be on fire, or in an emergency where immediate evacuation was needed would be a nightmare. All school buses are equipted with seat belt cutters, but to cut out 40 children would be impossible. Again, it's the powers that be who don't understand the daily workings of the real world who are deciding what's best for our children. When I discussed this issue with one of my favorite experienced drivers she half joking said, "Rose pick 3 of your favorite kids to cut out because that's all you'll be able to save".
Makes my job even more difficult. Hopefully this bill will NOT pass.