GothamSchools — daily independent reporting on NYC public schools

day thirteen

For one family, bus strike means 8 buses, 4 trains, and few options

Because of the bus strike, 11-year-old Alejandro and his mom, Maria Uruchima, take three buses to get to school.

One month into 2013, Maria Uruchima has already used up almost all of her sick and personal days getting her son to school.

On the verge of pulling him out of school, she found a partial solution to scheduling nightmare created by the bus strike — but one that still leaves her missing work and commuting almost four hours each day.

“I’ve started writing letters to the chancellor and the mayor saying, this is my situation,” Uruchima said. “I’m one of those parents that’s really struggling. I can’t afford to keep my son home because you guys aren’t getting it together. What can I do to help move this process along?”

Before the strike began two weeks ago, her son Alejandro’s bus picked him up from their home in Corona, Queens, at 6:40 a.m to take him to P.S./I.S. 49 in Middle Village. His 10- and 13-year-old siblings walked to school in the neighborhood, and his three-year-old sister spent the day with her grandmother. That gave Uruchima, who works in nonprofit management, plenty of time to get to her job in Brooklyn by 8:30 a.m.

Now, with most yellow buses off the streets because of a labor dispute between bus companies and drivers, Uruchima must accompany Alejandro to and from school. He has a learning disability and cannot take public transportation alone. All together, Uruchima’s round-trip commute takes eight buses and four trains, and she has been spending nearly half her workday in transit, using personal and sick time to make up for the lost hours. But those days are running out.

Here’s the route they’ve taken daily since the strike began:

Together, Uruchima and Alejandro take the 7:10 a.m. bus. When the bus is late, Uruchima says, Alejandro misses part of the morning tutoring program that helps him keep up in his classes.

They transfer twice and arrive at school by 8 a.m.

Uruchima takes a bus and two subways to get to work in Brooklyn by 9:15 a.m., then does the same commute in reverse, leaving work at 1:45 p.m. to make it to P.S./I.S. 49 by 3 p.m. She and Alejandro take three buses home.

Uruchima has been searching for a solution since day one of the strike, knowing that if it continued, she would be stuck between two bad options: putting her job in jeopardy and keeping her son out of school.

Uruchima brought Alejandro to school in a cab for the first few days of the strike, but it was a strain to front the money and wait to be reimbursed by the Department of Education. More than a week into the strike, the department rolled out a plan to help parents bill the cost directly to the city, but accessing that option brings its own complications, so Uruchima stuck with the bus.

If she could pick up Alejandro just a few hours later, she thought, she might be able to make things work. That would let her spend more than four and a half hours a day in her office in between commutes. She asked the school’s parent coordinator if Alejandro could join the after-school program.

“At the end of this week, I will have used up my personal days,” Uruchima said on Tuesday. “What then? I have no idea. … I haven’t heard anything form the school at all. I’ve been the one reaching out to them, saying, what are the options you guys can provide me for him to stay there?”

For the first two weeks, Uruchima said, she was told that the school couldn’t put him in the after-school program because of uncertainty about how long the strike would last.

Uruchima was seriously considering having her son spend the day at home with his grandmother. In anticipation of absences due to the strike, schools across the city are posting material online, and Uruchima figured she could go through the materials with her son when she got back from work.

“Pretty much he would have to wait for me to come home to give him those instructions that they have online on the Department of Education,” she said.

Then, this morning, the school agreed to enroll Alejandro in an after-school program that lasts until 6 p.m. But that’s a band-aid solution reached by a creative parent and a single school. So while Alejandro’s attendance and his mother’s job are safe for now, but many other parents across the city whose children can’t travel on public transportation alone still face the lose-lose decision Uruchima did until today.

Alejandro’s school’s solution reflects the strategy the city is using at this point in the strike. As Chancellor Dennis Walcott wrote in a message to principals on Tuesday, “We have shifted from broad initial preparations to more tailored options for students disproportionately affected by the absence of bus service.”

Recognizing that many parents are still stuck, the special education advocacy community is ramping up pressure on Mayor Bloomberg to find a way to end the strike. Public Advocate Bill de Blasio has called a press conference for Tuesday afternoon.

The strike shows no sign of ending. Mediation efforts have failed, and the National Labor Relations Board ruled today that the strike is legal and can go on.

Uruchima counts herself lucky for her new schedule: She’ll leave at 7 a.m., get home at 8 p.m., and spend nearly four of the 13 hours in between commuting until the bus strike ends.

  • Ellen

    For another family in Queens the strike has created a truly fearful occasion:
    A youngster from Louis Armstrong tried to walk home to Jamaica.  His parents took him to school in the morning.  At dismissal he realized he had no metro card.  Being too afraid to ask for another and too afraid to tell the bus driver, he walked for over 2 hours until he finally went into a store and called his parents.  His parents were frantic. 
    This has to end.

  • CitizenX

    My heart and deepest sympathy goes out to all students and parents ! I hope this gets resolved quickly’!!!! These students should not be the pawns in this power play.

  • wise owl

    Is there any way that these kids can be temporarily home schooled? Special ed teachers do home instruction? Can they go online and get work possibly? When this does get resolved I hope that an allowance will be made for all the work that these kids have missed.

  • soundman

    not knowing what the learning disability is… Finding a provider would be tough.  There would need to be a chaperone in the home with the teacher. Even if that could be the grandmother mentioned, kids with LDs generally need a lot of structure, it’s tough to just push them in a new direction all of a sudden.

  • BloombergMustGo

    This is truly disgusting.  Not only the situation, but the fact that as a society we accept the behavior and the individual behind it as if it is normal. 
    I quote from the article, ” His 10- and 13-year-old siblings walked to school in the neighborhood..”  Why is no one asking the REAL question:  Why is this child not allowed to attend the same school as his siblings?
    Please don’t answer with the same old drivel about services.  THAT is the job of the DOE.  To create schools that SERVE THE NEEDS of the communities they are in.  NOT to close schools, limit services, and drain public schools of services and space so that they can open charter schools to serve select students and create profits.
    The true disgrace here is the degree of displacement of students due to the MONUMENTAL INEPTITUDE, INCOMPETENCE, and MALFEASENCE of Bloomberg and his band of idiots. 
    As long as he is allowed to play his real life game of Monopoly with schools these problems will only worsen.
    The real blame starts with Bloomberg and winds its way up the chain through Cuomo, King, and continues all the way to Duncan and Obama.  These people are the greatest enemies of education in the history of this country.
    Please note that this child has a LEARNING DISABILITY not a serious handicap.  WHY could he not be serviced in his neighborhood school?!?!?!?!?!?!?!?!

  • old union

    Late this afternoon the National Labor Relations Board ruled that the bus drivers union has the right to strike and ruled against the bus companies in their complaint. On Monday, the union negotiators met at Gracie Mansion with the bus company representatives and both sides stated that unless the city was part of the negotiation the dispute could not be resolved. The mayor and the mayor alone is responsible for this labor job action as the bus drivers understand that their right to seniority is the one right they have to fight for no matter how difficult the struggle or the hardship it creates for families as the one in this story. The mayor has no shame and cowardly stated that the dispute is between the union and the bus companies knowing all too well that he is the one who has brought this travesty to the children, their families, and the hard working employees who drive school buses. In many parts of this city he is the most despised mayor anyone can recall.

  • wise owl

    Who knows how long this strike can go on for? There is some classwork that they seem to be getting on line. I’m just going to toss a few ideas out there.  Are there any teachers close by in schools that could be paid per session/.tutoring etc. that could help out here? It can be after school in the evening when the parents are home? This is an emergency situation.

  • Michael M (parent still)

    What about a moped?

  • Michael M (parent still)

    Huzzah.

  • A Former Teacher

    During the Hurricane, for a few days, children who were affected and unable to get to school were allowed to register at the nearest school they could get to and go to school there until the problems were resolved.  The same policy should be in effect for the duraton of school strike.  Additionally, who are these people who are being quickly certified to drive buses.  We should ask were did you get these temporary workers who hold commercial drivers licenses.

  • wise owl

    Can District 75 come up with an emergency plan? I know that there are sites all over the place. What about the so -called charter schools? They are getting DOE money. How about them stepping up to the plate?

  • Zelluc

    I leave at 6:30 and am home by 8:00 p.m as well working to survive

  • Jadams1

    If you knew anything about special education you wouldn’t question the need for transportation. It’s likely that the reporter wanted to describe the need for specialized transportation in a manner that protected the nature and severity of the child’s needs. Please be willing to take this as a magnanimous gesture to him and his family.

    The broader take away is that families have been seriously impacted by the bus strike, especially the ones who are already spending more time on average taking care of children without specialized needs.

  • http://twitter.com/lodoobie1 lodoobie

    this is the union’s fault

  • http://pulse.yahoo.com/_QW53WEE5EBQ6AJ2KPU33D2NU74 Asymptote

    She can’t afford to front the cab fare, and you want her to buy a moped?

  • wise owl

    Are there any retired teachers who live in this area that could help out in some way?

  • Brigav

    lodoobie – How dare they try to make a living!  Why wouldn’t they want to have no protections and make 20G at age 50 driving a bus?  Folks are just clamoring for jobs like that.  And wouldn’t it be great to have young, inexperienced bus drivers?  Insurance companies don’t know what they are talking about when they give young drivers higher insurance rates because of the increased frequencies of accidents! Those wacky actuaries!  This is Bloomberg’s fault, 80 million for ARIS which no one uses, City Time, cheating tutoring companies, crooked vendors, can’t fill out the forms to be reimbursed millions for govt. reimbursement, but no money for working place people struggling to make ends meet.  And lodoobie, you blame the working stiff. 

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