MADISON — Madison Local School District officials are considering privatizing bussing to save the district a substantial amount of money over the next five years, Superintendent James Herrholtz said Friday.
The “all or nothing” offer proposed to members of the Ohio Association of Public School Employees was an opportunity for the union to match an offer the district received from an outside transportation company. Under the offer with Community Bus Services (CBS) the district stands to save $300,000 per year over the next five years, Herrholtz said.
The Youngstown-based CBS is a private contractor and various school districts in Columbus, Warren, Youngstown and Wickliffe utilize its services, Herrholtz said. The idea behind privatizing transportation is not to oust the district employees. On the contrary, he said, the company guarantees it will employ a good portion of the district’s drivers.
“The drivers will be well trained and receive competitive wages and benefits,” Herrholtz said. “The only difference is they will receive their paychecks from a different company.”
The district has been engaged in the process of determining the most fiscally responsible route to take regarding transportation, he said.
“Even in that process, we never said we wouldn’t sit down with (union members) and bargain with them in good faith,” Herrholtz said. “We had three dates scheduled for next week that have been canceled.”
Herrholtz said the bottom line is the district is looking at the cost savings. The district would contract with CBS for a five-year period and then determine whether to renew the contract after those five-years expire, he said.
“We welcome and want to work with our employees throughout this process,” he said.
Local News
Privatizing bussing could save the Madison school district $300,000 a year
- Local News
-
-
Murder suspect kills self at mother’s grave
Madison Township police officers found the body of a murder suspect in the Alexander Harper Cemetery on Thursday afternoon, ending a day-long, multi-county manhunt.
-
Presses stopped
It was June 23, 1969.
-
Airport takes off with a new name
A new name for the Ashtabula County Airport is winding its way through the regulatory channels.
-
Property owners must pay for meth labs in Jefferson
An ordinance requiring landowners to pay for the clean-up costs of clandestine drug labs was unanimously adopted by Village Council.
-
Elections board gets help with time-consuming tasks
A Xenia company specializing in election services will take on some time-consuming tasks that should help contain the Ashtabula County Board of Elections’ labor costs, members said.
-
Commissioners pay to get the business
Commissioners on Tuesday approved a $15,000 contract with Growth Partnership for Ashtabula County to provide business service representation on behalf of the county’s One-Stop job training center.
-
Grand Valley sixth grader wins Ashtabula County Spelling Bee
James Elliott, a sixth grader at Grand Valley Middle School, clinched his win of the 29th annual Ashtabula County Area V Spelling Bee by successfully spelling the words “physique” and “daffodil.”
-
Sports, academics to come together
SPIRE Institute will expand its educational base and accept international students into its sports performance programs through a partnership with the Andrews Osborne Academy, Ted Meekma, SPIRE management team member, announced Wednesday.
-
Conneaut Chamber lauds top citizen, ‘Champions’
Nicholas Iarocci, Conneaut’s 2011 Citizen of the Year, needed plenty of gulps of water to complete his acceptance speech Tuesday night.
-
Felony charge filed in robbery
An Ashtabula woman who police said grabbed a woman’s purse inside a Conneaut supermarket late Monday afternoon faces a felony charge in Conneaut Municipal Court, according to reports.
- More Local News Headlines
-





