Now, the bus stops here
Andrew Glazer
WEST SIDE -- It took the director of an after-school program 10 phone
calls and two weeks to get someone to listen to his seemingly simple
request.
But it took the city’s director of transportation just two hours and one
phone call to make it happen.
Construction began for the new community center at Lions Park at the end
of January and John LeVere -- director of the Childs-Pace after-school
program there -- noticed that his students were in danger.
Trucks filled with dirt and rocks passed precariously close to where 15
backpack-toting students boarded and stumbled out of a yellow school bus.
He wanted the Newport-Mesa Unified School District to move the bus stop
to a safer location, approximately 60 feet down Anaheim Street, away from
the construction.
Tomas Cordero, who was waiting to pick up his 5-year-old daughter Grace
from the bus stop Tuesday afternoon, said a truck almost hit her there
last week.
“It’s very dangerous,” he said. “They can’t see the children.”
Two weeks ago, LeVere began calling various city, state and school
agencies to have the bus stop moved. He soon found himself lost in a
whirlpool of bureaucracy.
“It was impossible to get anyone to come out here,” he said Tuesday
morning. “It makes you wonder if we were on the other side of town, if it
would take so long.”
LeVere first asked the bus driver, Rachel De La Cruz, to drop the
children off at a safer spot. But De La Cruz, who also was worried about
the children’s safety there, said she couldn’t change her route without
her the approval of her boss.
So LeVere and a Childs-Pace board member called Nancy Malone, the school
district’s transportation director.
The two said they left messages with Malone’s assistant. Malone said she
never received the messages until Feb. 7.
“That was the first I heard of it,” Malone said. “When it’s a safety
issue, we don’t let it linger.”
Meanwhile, feeling ignored, LeVere called the California Highway Patrol.
CHP officials said they would send someone right over. On Monday, a CHP
inspector finally checked out the scene. After recognizing the danger,
she also called Malone.
LeVere tried calling the city’s transportation department as well. But
officials from the department told him they couldn’t ask the school
district to move the stop because doing so would make the city legally
liable if any child was injured there.
LeVere said a minor miracle happened Tuesday afternoon. Peter Naghavi,
director of the city’s transportation department, finally got word of his
request.
After talking to LeVere and watching the bus unload the 15 children,
Naghavi called Malone and asked her to move the bus stop. He said it was
the city’s responsibility to become involved if children were at risk.
Malone agreed to move the bus stop and De La Cruz will begin dropping the
children off at the safer location Thursday.
Naghavi said he was glad the matter was taken care of in just two hours:
“It shouldn’t take very long to move an unofficial bus stop [that]
doesn’t have any signs just a few feet.”
LeVere shook his head quietly.
“It shouldn’t have been like this,” he said. “The minute they became
aware, they should have come out and done it.”
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