Driving to distinction
Young Chang
Sally Miller once sat in her school bus from 3 to 9 p.m. because her
passenger, a young boy who was mentally challenged, had no one to meet
him.
They sang songs and read books until the boy’s mother arrived. Miller, an
Ocean View School District bus driver, didn’t want police to take custody
of her young friend.
That would have scared him, she said.
Tuesday, the 62-year-old woman was named California’s School Bus Driver
of the Year for doing her job safely and compassionately. The recent
retiree received a plaque from Richard Lane, assistant chief for the
California Highway Patrol, at an awards ceremony at the Ocean View School
District offices in Huntington Beach.
“She just always did an exceptional job of going above and beyond the
call of duty,” said Le Ann Quick, the district’s director of
transportation. “And she did it because that’s just the way she is. She
didn’t do it for recognition or pats on the back.”
A district driver for 25 years, Miller said she is attached to her
students.
For years, she helped special education and handicapped passengers get on
and off the bus.
For miles, she and children between 8-months-old and eighth grade sang
Disney tunes from the radio and from her tapes. Songs from the movie
“Tarzan” were recent favorites.
And for more than two decades, Miller watched young preschoolers grow
into middle schoolers and then eventually become the fathers of her
current little passengers.
“A lot of times, the bus driver knows what’s going on in [kids’] lives,”
Miller said, “before the teachers or parents do.”
The bully that steals everyone’s lunch money, the boy who knows someone’s
bringing something taboo to school, the student with the most Pokemon
cards -- Miller has met and heard of them all.
“If they have any problems, [the kids] usually confide in me,” the
Fountain Valley resident said.
Quick noted Miller is someone to be trusted, in more ways than one.
Denise Medina, an officer for the California Highway Patrol, said Miller
was selected for the state award because of her accident-free driving
record.
“For 25 years... to drive a big, yellow bus without ever being involved
in a collision is pretty remarkable,” Medina said.
Looking back on her career, Miller remembers well-behaved children who
didn’t break bus rules. She remembers the days before two-way radios,
when she had to run into schools to make a call. And she remembers
calling emergency numbers if a handicapped passenger had a seizure on the
bus.
“They’re like my own grandchildren,” Miller said.
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