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Eyes on the Road-E-O: Ohio’s school bus Olympics

A bus maneuvers through the Offset Street event at the Northwest Ohio Regional Safety Road-E-O, one of the competitions that feed into the statewide event each year.
Janek Schaller
/
Midstory
A bus maneuvers through the Offset Street event at the Northwest Ohio Regional Safety Road-E-O, one of the competitions that feed into the statewide event each year.

This is an edited version of an article originally published on September 2nd, 2025 by Midstory.

Glistening in the morning sunlight, a yellow school bus makes a long left-hand turn across the parking lot of Westland High School, just outside of Columbus. The vehicle rolls towards a row of orange traffic cones, comes to a deliberate stop and emits a sharp beep. 

But the doors stay shut. It’s a Saturday. School isn’t in session, and the school bus driver is maneuvering an empty bus.

Welcome to the 2025 Ohio State School Bus Safety Road-E-O, where drivers from across the state compete to be crowned the Grand Champion.

The competition

Organized by four different state departments that oversee public education, the competition is designed to promote and reinforce safe driving habits. 

There are three main components to the Road-E-O. First, drivers have to take a written exam, which tests their knowledge of the state’s extensive school bus manual. Then, they must correctly identify five defects on a parked school bus, a task meant to mimic the standard pre-trip inspection drivers conduct before beginning their routes. Finally, the competitors get behind the wheel and steer a bus through an obstacle course, closely watched by a host of state-certified instructors who assign points to each driver based on their performance.

Brandon Anness is one of those judges. Clipboard in hand, his eyes are trained on the bus approaching him.

“We’re doing the serpentine event here, which is determining their ability to maneuver the school bus in tight spaces,” Anness told me as we watched the event. “They’ll go forward through the cones, and then they’ll do a reverse serpentine on the way back. They have to complete the circle to finish on the opposite side from which they started.”

The cones are placed perhaps ten yards apart — plenty of room for a compact car to weave through, but a comically-tight gap for a 50-foot behemoth to negotiate going forward, let alone in reverse. Even the slightest brush of one of the cones will result in a loss of points.

The Road-E-O has taken place annually since 1964. This year, 42 drivers — the top six finishers from seven regional events across the state of Ohio — are competing. 

One of those competitors is Arlene Sandiford, representing the school district in Sylvania, a northwestern suburb of Toledo. Sandiford has driven school buses for the last 17 years. Previously, she worked odd jobs — cake decorator, childcare provider, grocery store cashier — but applied to become a driver upon advice from her uncle, who was working for the city’s public school district at the time.

“I did not think I’d still be here 17 years [later], but I don’t really see myself doing anything else now."
Arlene Sandiford, Road-E-O competitor and school bus driver

Initially, she appreciated the fact that the job was compatible with her responsibilities as a parent. It even gave her a convenient opportunity to drive her own daughter to school each day. While some kids might not be too keen on the arrangement, Sandiford said her daughter didn’t mind riding to school with her mom and a busload of her peers. In fact, she loved it.

And Sandiford loved it, too — so much so that she’s still in the driver’s seat, long after her daughter stopped riding the bus.

“I did not think I’d still be here 17 years [later], but I don’t really see myself doing anything else now,” Sandiford said. “Most people do not go into the education field of any caliber — from a superintendent all the way down to the cafeteria janitors, school bus drivers — they don’t go in it just for money. … There’s something different about this.”

But Sandiford’s sense of job satisfaction is rapidly becoming a rarity in the world of school bus driving.

A mass exodus of school bus drivers

While employment has been in decline since 2009, school bus drivers began leaving the profession in droves in the aftermath of the COVID-19 pandemic. The national working population shrank by nearly 15% in just nine months in 2022, and while that trend has stabilized slightly in the years since, nearly one of every three school bus drivers who were employed in 2009 is no longer behind the wheel.

A 2023 national survey conducted by HopSkipDrive, an advocacy group for more reliable public school transportation, revealed that 92% of school administrators feel constrained by a limited supply of bus drivers. That percentage is up from 78% in 2021 and 88% in 2022.

There are a few leading causes for the labor shortage. The first is that the workforce is aging. A 2021 inventory of the working population determined that the average school bus driver was 54, 12 years older than the national average for all U.S. workers.

“I have five [drivers] within retirement age that could go any day if they chose,” Scott Brooker, the Director of Transportation for Springfield Schools in Holland, Ohio, said. “We need probably four or five just to fill current open spots, and we don’t have any subs.”

School bus driver has declined in the last 15 years.
Midstory
School bus driver has declined in the last 15 years.

While he trusts his “great group” of veteran drivers, Brooker regularly has to step in to cover routes. He says he drives more than some of his full-time staff do.

The second major contributor to the school bus driver exodus is low pay. Sandiford, who now drives for Sylvania City Schools in Sylvania, Ohio, said there was a time earlier in her career when she wasn’t getting paid what she felt she was worth. While she is grateful to no longer be in that position, the average school bus driver has seen their income sag further and further below the national median over the past two decades. 

The sporadic nature of the job only compounds the pay gap. Since school bus drivers rarely work a full 40-hour workweek (typically clocking closer to 32 hours per week), they routinely earn less than 60% of what the average American worker makes. Some school districts have begun offering their drivers shifts during the school day, sometimes as auxiliary janitors or cafeteria workers, but even those affordances can’t compensate for lost income over the summer months when schools aren’t in session.

Drivers can’t even be assured of the fact that their earnings will keep pace with the rising cost of living. The three-year average of weekly median wages for school bus drivers was nearly 3% lower in 2021 – 2023 than it was in the three years before the pandemic, while the same average for the rest of the workforce rose by 5%.

Given the harsh financial reality, it’s little surprise that districts have found it immensely difficult to hire and retain new drivers. Only 59% of all new drivers last more than two years behind the wheel, and less than a quarter drive for eight years or more

School administrators like Brooker have been forced to find creative ways to drum up interest. Some districts have started stationing their buses in public places with high foot traffic to raise awareness of the staffing shortage. Brooker’s district implemented a $500 bonus for new drivers for the 2024-25 school year and hosted a test drive event where community members could try driving the bus themselves. 

“All we got to do is get you behind the wheel of the bus,” Brooker said, explaining the rationale behind the event. “Once you get behind the wheel, we will get you there.”

50 people turned up to give it a shot, but at the end of the day, Brooker only managed to secure one additional driver for his roster. 

Passion and skill

Back in the Westland High School parking lot, Chuck SantaMaria paces back and forth, a vessel of exuberant energy. He’s on the shorter side, with a scratchy, white goatee, and is sporting a black baseball cap and athletic sunglasses. SantaMaria only began driving school buses in his late forties. Before that, he owned a sandwich shop; before that, he worked as a home improvement salesperson. 

Now, SantaMaria is a judge for the diminishing clearance event, in which drivers must roll their vehicles through pairs of cones that narrow steadily until they’re only an inch wider than either side of the bus. There is virtually no room for error.

Chuck SantaMaria monitors a bus passing through the diminishing clearance event.
Janek Schaller
/
Midstory
Chuck SantaMaria monitors a bus passing through the diminishing clearance event.

But once again, this seemingly impossible feat is a trifle for the competitors. SantaMaria and I watched as several drivers passed through the gauntlet completely unscathed. Perplexed, I asked him how they were making it look so easy.

“This one, if you practice it, you can do rather well,” SantaMaria said. “Just keep focused on one side.”

But there’s a difference between driving an empty bus and a full one.

“You know, bus drivers don’t talk about this,” SantaMaria said. “It’s all in the back of our heads. Children’s lives actually depend on us.”

SantaMaria’s connection to his students isn’t confined to the school day, either. After every child is safely deposited at home, SantaMaria and his wife — who is also a school bus driver — often return to school to see their students perform in concerts and plays.

The attention and care that SantaMaria gives to his kids in their everyday lives is returned to him in equal measure on his routes.

“By doing that with the kids, you know, they like and they respect you more,” SantaMaria said. “And then if there’s a problem and you tell them something, they tend to listen better.”

Absenteeism and transportation

In 2020, rates of chronic absenteeism in U.S. schools hovered around 13%, but jumped to over 28% in 2022. While that percentage has decreased slightly since then, the most recent data available indicates that nearly a quarter of all students struggle to maintain consistent attendance.

The 2023 HopSkipDrive survey (which indicated that 74% of respondents saw a strong link between absenteeism and unreliable access to transportation) reported that students from lower-income households, students experiencing homelessness and students with special needs were overrepresented among the chronically absent. 

Unsurprisingly, the survey also identified that students living greater distances from their schools were more likely to be experiencing absenteeism. But school bus driver shortages have made life difficult for families living in closer proximity to schools, too. In Ohio, the school district in North Ridgeville eliminated bus service for all students living within two miles of their school last year. The policy forced some children as young as 9 to walk to class on busy roads.

Arlene Sandiford, front center, and Scott Brooker, front left, join the rest of the Northwest regional team for a celebratory photo.
Janek Schaller
/
Midstory
Arlene Sandiford, front center, and Scott Brooker, front left, join the rest of the Northwest regional team for a celebratory photo.

The shortage has also had an impact on Ohio’s Road-E-O. In recent years, fewer and fewer drivers have shown up to the regional competitions, evidence that passionate folks like Sandiford, Brooker and SantaMaria are now rarer in their profession. But even as the number of drivers continues to shrink, the competitors at state still display an intense attachment to their jobs. 

Brooker has qualified for state in each of the last three years, and, after a dismal first outing in 2023 (“I got too confident and too cocky, just like most rookies do”), he placed tenth in 2024. This year, he has his sights set even higher.

The Road-E-O offers Brooker the chance to do what he loves, and to do it well. It celebrates good drivers and drives home some lessons that apply outside the high school parking lot.

“You just have to know the bus,” Brooker said. “You have to know those mirrors. You have to understand that pivot point. And that’s where the Road-E-O really helps fine-tune those so that when you’re in the real world, in a situation, [you can say] ‘Hey, I can get out of this situation.’” 

Back on the course, Arlene Sandiford brings her bus to a halt in front of the serpentine. Brandon Anness gives her the go-ahead, and the vehicle lurches into gear and creeps forward. Sandiford then pilots the forty-foot bus through the cones with more dexterity than most sedans could muster. 

Anness notes that she’s doing quite well, but that comes as no surprise — the serpentine is Sandiford’s signature event. 

“Some people don’t feel it’s easy,” Sandiford told me a few days before the competition. “There’s really no secret. I mean, it’s just common knowledge. Watch your mirrors, and know where that back tire is going to be.” 

Having passed through the serpentine going forward, Sandiford then does the event in reverse, comes to a stop and lays on the horn. Anness confers with the other judge, fills out a scorecard and sends Sandiford on her way to the rest of the course. 

When the scores were tabulated at the end of the afternoon, Sandiford ended up placing fifth. She was thrilled.

“This is what I came for,” Sandiford said. “I got what I came for. I’m going to bed happy tonight.”