A Day In the Life of a Bus Driver
November 30th,
2015. A snowstorm during the night. The first of the season. It's 7 AM and the
sand trucks have not started yet, as usual for the initial storm.
My start for
the day gives me a long 60 foot articulated (accordion) bus that has the
flexible joint in the middle, with the heavy engine in the back, and the drive
wheels are the rear tires. Very difficult to drive in snow and ice.
As I start
out my bus route I've picked up a few passengers. Each time I try to pull over
and pick up someone, the bus keeps sliding forward a few feet no matter how
slow I'm going. Very dangerous for the one standing outside next to the front
door. That's why we try to keep 4 feet from the curb.
Every
intersection seems to be packed down with snow, and icy. Black ice, the worst
and most slippery. Very hard to stop or start without sliding or spinning the
rear tires.
I'm coming
down a double lane divided main road to an intersection with stop and go
lights. There are several cars stopped in each lane waiting on a red light. I'm
going very slow trying not to brake too hard so the tires don't start sliding.
I'm only going 5 miles an hour, but every time I push on the brakes, the back
end pushes forward and starts the bus to jackknife. The worst of all scenarios.
I see the nightmare happening in my side mirror. I have to let off the brake
and keep rolling to stop the disaster. But I'm getting ever closer to the stopped
cars. I retry braking to slow the bus down further but the same thing happens.
Jack-knife starts again. It's a time game, waiting for a green light so the
cars will have a chance and start moving. But its a long light. I see an out
with a right lane turn only possibility, but then I would be making a turn and
not being able to continue my regular route. It would take a half hour to get
back on track in this weather. I continue to play the nightmare out in slow
motion, hoping against hope that the light will change, the cars will move
forward, and I won't run into the back of the car ahead. My heart is thumping.
My eyes darting from front, to the right turn lane, to the side mirror watching
my bus jackknifing. I would be crossing my fingers if I had the time. Black
ice, sliding bus, hoping against hope.
And then the
light turns, the cars start moving, and once again I have avoided an at-fault
accident that would have ruined my 22 year safe driving record. Holy crap!
I won't even
get into the later problems of the air brakes losing the air due to constant
braking, requiring constant pull overs to rev the engine to get back some air.
It was a very bad morning.
Russ Bridger, Metro
Transit Bus Driver – Minneapolis Minnesota
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