Parent questions why schools kept open after EMSB bus slides off icy street - Action News
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Montreal

Parent questions why schools kept open after EMSB bus slides off icy street

The English Montreal School Board is downplaying concerns about its decision to keep its schools open Tuesday despite reports of at least two traffic accidents involving its students on icy roads.

No students hurt in Tuesday's incident during freezing rain storm

Montreal's streets were covered in ice after Tuesday's unexpected dose of freezing rain. (Charles Constant / CBC)

The English Montreal School Board is downplaying concerns about its decision to keep its schools open Tuesday despite reports of at least two traffic accidents involving its students on icy roads.

In one incident, a school bus carrying 35 students slid off a street in a residential neighbourhood near Cedarcrest Elementary School in Montreal's Saint-Laurent borough. The bus went over a sidewalk and came to rest against a tree.

No students were injured in the incident.

Helen Hefter's 10-year-old daughter was on the bus andsaid the driver expressed concerns about the conditions while picking her up.

"When she first got on the bus yesterday, the bus driver was actually debating whether to turn around because the roads were so bad," Hefter said.

She said the students had to wait on thebusfor close to an hour fora tow truck to arrive and get the busback on the street.

Buses leave the EMSB's Pierre de Courbetin Elementary School on Tuesday. The board said 85 buses safely arrived at their destinations despite the freezing rain. (EMSB Pierre de Courbetin)

Freezing rain warning came too late

The EMSB's decision to keep its schools open yesterday despite the treacherous roads met with heavy criticism on social media and elsewhere.

The EMSB said yesterday that advice from its school bus contractor, Transco, is a key factor when deciding if it should keep its schools open.

The board's chairwoman, Angela Mancini, said Environment Canada only issued a freezing rain warning after the decision had been made withthe bus company and other school boards on the island of Montreal to keep schools open.

Environment Canada hadn't predictedfreezing rain for Tuesdayand only updated its forecast with a warningat 6:20 a.m.

"Buses were on the road, and the rain hadn't started," she said.

She said it's difficult to cancel classes once buses have started picking up students.

"Many parents go to work once their children are on the bus, so it's difficult for us to say we're going to bring them back home or close the school," she said.

EMSB spokesman Michael Cohenconfirmed the incident involving the school bus, but he said it was minor and noted that the board's 85 other buses and their passengers arrived safely at their destinations yesterday.

'A risky ride'

Hefter, however, said it was lucky no one on her daughter'sbus or outside on the street was hurt when it lost control.

"It was a little bit dangerous yesterday and would have been better to stay at home."

That feeling was echoed by Ernie Pompa, whose two children were involved in a minor car accident yesterday while being driven to their EMSB schools by their aunt.

The school board'sassertion that all students got to school safely may be true, he said, but it would have been safer just to close for the day.

He said it was great that all the children ultimately arrived safely, "but it was a risky ride."

"I think the EMSB needs to look at their procedures on snow dayswhen the weather is severe."

The EMSB's Mancini said a review is standard in such cases.

"When things like this occur, we always have a moment of review and could we have done things differently," she said.

"The security of our students is paramount."