Dufour yellow school bus parked in a parking lot
Classes were called off in eight southwest Vermont schools on Tuesday when its bus service provider, Dufour Transportation, didn’t have enough drivers to run the school bus routes. Photo courtesy of Southwest Vermont Supervisory Union

Eight schools in southwestern Vermont called off classes on Tuesday due to a lack of school bus drivers, a staffing shortage that the bus company partly attributed to Covid-19 mitigation practices. The interrupted classes and bus runs are scheduled to resume Wednesday. 

The Southwest Vermont Supervisory Union canceled classes in almost all Bennington County public schools after several drivers with Dufour Transportation couldnโ€™t work on Tuesday. Three drivers were out because of personal matters, while two were quarantining as they waited for the results of Covid-19 tests, said Linda Flynn, Dufourโ€™s general manager.

โ€œTheyโ€™re quarantining, just in case,โ€ Flynn said Tuesday morning. โ€œWe canโ€™t take the chance, because one person can spread it to a lot of people.โ€

The closures affected eight schools in Bennington, Pownal, Shaftsbury and Woodford. They enroll about 2,500 students from elementary through high school, supervisory union spokesperson Katie West said.

Dufour said this is the first time in its decadeslong contract with the supervisory union that a shortage of bus drivers has led to school closures. To run smoothly, the areaโ€™s school bus routes need around 30 drivers.

Flynn said bus drivers who are feeling slightly ill โ€” including in cases where they wouldโ€™ve gone to work in pre-pandemic times โ€” now must quarantine and undergo Covid-19 testing out of an abundance of caution. They can be out of work for up to three days, depending on when they get a negative Covid-19 test.

This has forced the Massachusetts company to seek more bus drivers, including two for the Bennington area, she said.

โ€œItโ€™s pretty tight,โ€ Flynn said. โ€œWeโ€™re all driving. Management is driving. Mechanics are driving.โ€

The Vermont Agency of Education said school districts across the state are experiencing similar difficulties with maintaining school bus routes. 

โ€œThis is not a unique, nor new problem,โ€ agency spokesperson Ted Fisher said. โ€œSome districts have struggled with this annually for several years.โ€ The situation is part of a larger staffing shortage in the education system, he said.

The elementary school as well as the middle and high school in Arlington, which recently came under the Southwest Vermont Supervisory Union umbrella, were not affected by Tuesdayโ€™s closures.

Both schools have employed their own bus drivers for years and continue to do so, Assistant Superintendent Bill Bazyk said.

The supervisory union called off classes on Monday evening, saying in a Facebook post that Dufour wouldnโ€™t be able to provide enough bus drivers โ€œout of an abundance of caution.โ€ It didnโ€™t provide details, and many on social media speculated about the cause.

In another post on Tuesday morning, the supervisory union said the driver shortage was due to โ€œillness and bereavement.โ€ It said schools will reopen on Wednesday, with all buses running on schedule.

The supervisory union doesnโ€™t expect any further school interruptions stemming from a lack of school bus drivers, West said on Tuesday. โ€œOur goal is always going to be to have the kids in school so they can engage in learning,โ€ she said.

West described Dufour as a trusted partner, with whom the supervisory union has contracted to provide school bus services for at least 30 years.

Dufour provides school bus services to most towns in Massachusettsโ€™ Berkshire County, on top of those in Bennington County.

Correction: An earlier version of this story incorrectly identified the Southwest Vermont Supervisory Union in the cutline.

Previously VTDigger's southern Vermont and substance use disorder reporter.