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When the bus ride is an IEP violation.

For kids on an IEP, transportation isn't optional — it's a federally-protected related service. Log incidents, check driver credentials, pull camera footage, and document every missed pickup in the same format your district will have to answer in writing.

Transportation Incident Log
Severity: High · Apr 15, 2026
Child arrived home 45 min late with no notification. Bus harness was not secured. Driver could not identify child by name.
Auto-generated: Formal complaint letter with 34 C.F.R. § 300.34 citation →
Severity: Medium · Apr 8, 2026
Bus aide was absent with no substitute provided. Child was alone with driver for entire route.
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Log every incident. Track patterns. Auto-generate complaint letters with legal citations.

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Log a Transportation Incident

Every missed pickup, late drop-off, or bus behavior concern is evidence. Log it here in the exact format a compliance officer expects, then copy the summary or email it directly to your district.

When this launches, nothing will be uploaded or stored. The tool will run entirely in your browser so you can save each record to your own device. We recommend keeping a dated folder of every incident.

Vet the Driver & Monitor Live

Run the same kind of credential check on bus drivers and monitors that you'd run on a teacher. Every state publishes a free CDL lookup — most also publish a school bus driver registry. Start with your state and verify each person assigned to your child's route.

Tip: Ask the district for the full legal name of every driver and monitor assigned to your child's route — primary and substitute. If they refuse, put the request in writing citing FERPA right-to-know on staff providing services to your child.

What Every Special Needs Transportation Staff Member Must Have

Whether they're a district employee or working for a contracted 3rd-party vendor, the bar is the same. This is what you're asking the district to confirm in writing.

CDLCommercial Driver's License with S + P Endorsements

School bus drivers must hold a Class B (or Class A) CDL with both the School Bus (S) endorsement and the Passenger (P) endorsement. The S endorsement requires a separate knowledge test, a skills test, and a federal background check. A driver with just a CDL and no S endorsement is not legally cleared to drive your child's bus.

Verify: Your state DMV / Motor Vehicle Commission license lookup (linked above). Ask the district for the driver's CDL number and verify the S and P endorsements are active.

BG CHECKCriminal Background Check + Fingerprinting

Federal law requires a criminal background check on any CDL holder seeking the S endorsement, and state law typically requires a separate education-sector fingerprint-based background check for anyone working with students. 3rd-party contracted drivers are subject to the same requirements — it is not optional because they work for a vendor.

Ask in writing: "Please confirm that every driver and monitor assigned to my child's route — primary and substitute — has completed a fingerprint-based criminal background check through the state education agency, and provide the date of last clearance."

CAN REGChild Abuse & Neglect Registry Clearance

Most states maintain a child abuse and neglect central registry separate from the criminal background check. Staff transporting students must be cleared against this registry. A criminal background check alone is not sufficient.

Ask in writing: "Please confirm clearance against the state child abuse and neglect central registry for every driver and monitor assigned to my child's route."

MVRMotor Vehicle Record Review

Districts and contracted vendors are required to review each driver's motor vehicle record — typically annually — to check for DUIs, reckless driving convictions, license suspensions, and excessive moving violations. A 3rd-party vendor that hasn't pulled an MVR in the last 12 months is operating outside policy.

Ask in writing: "What is the district's policy and the vendor's policy on annual motor vehicle record review, and when was the last MVR pulled on each driver assigned to my child's route?"

SPED TRAINSpecial Education & Disability-Specific Training

A CDL does not prepare a driver or monitor to transport a child with autism, seizures, a feeding tube, a wheelchair tie-down system, communication needs, or a behavior intervention plan. States and districts are increasingly requiring documented special-needs transportation training — but enforcement is uneven, especially with 3rd-party vendors.

Ask in writing: "What specific training has each driver and monitor assigned to my child's route received regarding my child's IEP, BIP, medical protocols, and the use of any specialized restraints, harnesses, or tie-downs? Please provide training dates and content."

DOT MEDDOT Medical Certification

Federal law requires school bus drivers to hold a current DOT medical examiner's certificate, renewed at minimum every 24 months (often annually for older drivers). A driver whose medical card has lapsed is not legally cleared to operate the bus.

Ask in writing: "Please confirm the date of last DOT medical certification for each driver assigned to my child's route, and the expiration date of the current certificate."

Crossover with Staff Credentials: The monitor or 1:1 aide riding with your child is still an educational paraprofessional under ESSA — they're subject to the same paraprofessional standards as a classroom aide. Run them through the Staff Credential Verification tool too.

Transportation Is a Related Service. Period.

If transportation is listed on your child's IEP, the district must provide it the same way they must provide speech or OT — as a matter of federal law, not district preference.

34 C.F.R. § 300.34Transportation as a Related Service

Federal regulation explicitly defines transportation as a related service, including travel to and from school, travel between schools, and specialized equipment (lifts, harnesses, ramps) if needed for the child to benefit from special education.

What this means: If your child cannot access their IEP without specialized transportation, the district must provide it — at no cost to you.

FAPEMissed Transportation = Missed FAPE

Every minute of instructional time lost to a missed or late bus is a loss of Free Appropriate Public Education. Courts and Office for Civil Rights complaints have treated chronic transportation failures as denials of FAPE — with compensatory service awards.

What to track: Total minutes of instruction lost per incident, and across the quarter. You can request compensatory services to make up the time.

34 C.F.R. § 300.107Equivalent Service Requirement

Nonacademic and extracurricular services — including transportation — must be provided to students with disabilities in a manner that affords equal opportunity. A shorter school day because of bus schedule is not acceptable.

Common violation: Sped bus arrives late every day, so your child misses the first 30 minutes of class. That's discriminatory scheduling, not a logistics problem.

SEC. 504Section 504 Applies Too

Even if your child doesn't have an IEP, Section 504 of the Rehabilitation Act requires districts to provide transportation that doesn't discriminate against students with disabilities. OCR accepts 504 transportation complaints regularly.

Where to file: U.S. Department of Education Office for Civil Rights — free, no lawyer required. We'll generate the complaint for you in the Letters tool.

RESTRAINTRestraint & Seclusion on the Bus

Physical restraint on the bus must follow the same rules as restraint in the classroom — which in most states means it can only be used in an emergency, must be documented, and parents must be notified the same day. Harnesses used to prevent escape are not automatically legal.

Ask in writing: "What is the district's restraint policy for bus transportation? Has my child been restrained on the bus this year? Please provide incident reports."

VETTING3rd-Party Drivers Must Be Background-Checked & Vetted

Any driver or monitor transporting students with disabilities — whether directly employed by the district or contracted through a 3rd-party vendor — must pass the same background screening the district requires for its own transportation staff. That typically includes a criminal background check, fingerprinting, a state child-abuse registry check, a motor vehicle record review, the proper CDL with the school bus (S) and passenger (P) endorsements, and training on special education, restraint, and student-specific IEP needs. The contract does not outsource the vetting obligation — the district remains responsible for who is behind the wheel with your child.

What to ask in writing: "Please provide written confirmation that every driver and monitor assigned to my child's route has completed (1) a criminal background check and fingerprinting, (2) a state child-abuse/neglect registry check, (3) a motor vehicle record review, (4) CDL verification with S and P endorsements, and (5) training on my child's IEP, BIP, and any medical or restraint protocols. Please also describe how substitute drivers are vetted before being assigned mid-year."
Why this matters for 3rd-party providers: Contracted vendors operate on tight margins and often use a pool of substitute drivers to fill last-minute gaps. Parents have reported finding out after an incident that a substitute driver had not been fingerprinted, had a recent DUI, or had no special-education training. You are entitled to the answer before something happens — not after.

3RD-PARTYContracted Transportation Must Notify You of Vehicle Changes

When a district contracts with a 3rd-party vendor to transport students with disabilities, that vendor is acting as an extension of the district. If they swap your child's usual van or bus for a different vehicle — different driver, different monitor, different tie-down configuration, different route-mates — they are required to notify you in advance. Consistency of transportation is part of the IEP service, not a scheduling convenience.

Why it matters: A substitute vehicle may not have the harness, car seat, wheelchair tie-down, or sensory accommodations your child's IEP requires. A substitute driver may not know your child's medical, behavioral, or communication needs. For kids with trauma histories or rigidity around routine, an unannounced vehicle change is a regulation event — not a logistics detail.
Ask in writing: "What is the 3rd-party transportation vendor's written policy on vehicle substitutions? I am requesting same-day notification any time my child's assigned van/bus, driver, or monitor changes, and confirmation that any substitute vehicle is equipped with the specialized equipment listed in the IEP."

FOIAYou Can Request Bus Camera Footage

Most district buses record video. Parents of students with disabilities can request footage of incidents involving their child under FERPA (as an educational record) and state public-records laws. Districts must preserve footage once requested — even if their default is to overwrite in 7-30 days.

Template language: "Under FERPA and [state] public records law, I request preservation and release of all video recordings from Bus [#] on [date] between [time range]. Please confirm preservation in writing within 48 hours."

What Districts Hope You Won't Notice

These are the most common transportation failures parents of IEP kids report — and what each one actually means in terms of your legal position.

The "routing glitch"

Bus is 20+ minutes late for two weeks straight, then "routing is being adjusted." Translation: the district under-staffed the special ed transportation budget and your child is absorbing the cost. This is a FAPE issue.

"We couldn't find your house"

Driver claims they didn't know the address. For a student on an IEP with transportation as a related service, route establishment is the district's job — not yours. Missed pickups on day one of school are a procedural failure, not a parent problem.

The monitor "called out"

Your child's IEP requires a 1:1 monitor on the bus. The monitor is absent and the district runs the route anyway. That's a service the IEP team mandated — skipping it is a violation, not a schedule adjustment.

"Your child was being unsafe"

Translation for an incident report: behavior occurred on the bus. You are entitled to know what the behavior was, what the driver/monitor did, and whether it was de-escalated per the BIP. Ask for the bus-specific behavior plan in writing.

2+ hour bus rides each way

Some rural and specialized-program placements involve brutal commutes. Transportation time that exceeds what non-disabled peers experience can itself be a 504 issue. Document exact pickup-to-arrival times for 2 weeks before raising it.

"We dropped them at the corner"

For students whose IEP requires hand-to-hand release to a named adult, a curbside drop-off is a safety violation. This is one of the fastest-to-win OCR complaints because the IEP language is explicit.

Red Flags That Belong in Writing

When you see one of these, don't wait for the next IEP meeting. Document it now, email the special education director, and copy yourself.

Child arrives dysregulated Multiple days in a row of meltdowns immediately after the bus. Something is happening on that bus.
Unexplained marks or bruises Document with dated photos. Request bus camera footage in writing within 24 hours to ensure preservation.
Child won't get on the bus Sudden refusal to board in a child who previously rode without issue. Not a discipline problem — an information problem.
Different driver each week Stability matters for kids on IEPs. Chronic driver turnover on a specialized route is a staffing finding.
Missing bus monitor IEP says 1:1 on bus, reality doesn't match. This is the easiest paper trail to build: just log the days the monitor wasn't there.
Harness or tie-down not used Specialized equipment listed in the IEP must be used on every ride. "We were in a hurry" is not a defense.
Late every single day Not one bad week — a pattern of 10+ minutes late every day. That pattern is the violation.
Driver without correct CDL endorsement School buses require specific endorsements. Run the same credential check you'd run on a teacher (try our Credentials tool).
Unvetted 3rd-party driver Contracted driver or substitute shows up without district-confirmed background check, fingerprinting, child-abuse registry clearance, or special ed training. Ask for written confirmation before your child rides again.
Unannounced vehicle swap (3rd-party) A contracted transportation vendor shows up with a different van or bus than your child's usual — no call, no email, no notice. Specialized equipment may be missing and the substitute driver may not know your child's IEP needs. Notification is required.

What to do with a finding: Log it above, save a dated copy, email the special education director and transportation director together in the same email, and request a written response within 10 business days. If you get silence or runaround, escalate to an OCR complaint — we'll help you write it.

AI Safety Verification

Enter the transportation company name or DOT number and the names of every driver and aide on your child's route. We pull real federal safety data and tell you what we find.

Add every person assigned to your child's route — primary and substitute.