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News / Nation & World

Students had complained about erratic driving before bus wreck

Investigators question if fatigue played a role since he had two jobs

By ERIK SCHELZIG, Associated Press
Published: November 25, 2016, 7:59pm
4 Photos
In this , file photo, a school bus is carried away in Chattanooga, Tenn., from the site where it crashed. Students and administrators raised concerns about a Tennessee school bus driver&#039;s behavior behind the wheel in the weeks before a crash that killed several children. Records released by the school district Friday, Nov. 25, include two written statements by students complaining about Johnthony Walker&#039;s driving.
In this , file photo, a school bus is carried away in Chattanooga, Tenn., from the site where it crashed. Students and administrators raised concerns about a Tennessee school bus driver's behavior behind the wheel in the weeks before a crash that killed several children. Records released by the school district Friday, Nov. 25, include two written statements by students complaining about Johnthony Walker's driving. (AP Photo/Mark Humphrey, File) (Angela Lewis Foster/ Chattanooga Times Free Press) Photo Gallery

NASHVILLE, Tenn. — Students and administrators raised concerns about a Tennessee school bus driver’s behavior behind the wheel in the weeks before a crash that killed six children.

Police have charged driver Johnthony Walker with vehicular homicide after the crash. Federal authorities said Walker was driving off the designated bus route when he wrecked on a curvy road while carrying 37 children on their way home from Woodmore Elementary School.

Records released by the school district Friday include two written statements by students complaining about Walker’s driving.

“The bus driver drives fast,” one student wrote earlier this month. “It feels like the bus is going to flip over. … When someone is in the aisle he stops the bus and he makes people hit their heads.”

Another student wrote: “The bus driver was doing sharp turns and he made me fly over to the next seat. We need seat belts.”

On Nov. 2, a school official boarded the bus after the driver complained that students were not listening to him. One student had complained about the heat on the bus and cursed about it to the bus driver.

“The driver was now visibly upset and continued on by saying that he had another job and driving this bus was just a part-time job for him,” wrote Carlis Shackelford, a behavioral specialist at the school. “Driver stated that he could just leave him at the school. He then stated ‘or I can just leave the student on the bus and I will get off the bus and leave the school.'”

“Driver stated that he did not care about the students and proceeded to tell the students he did not care about them,” he wrote.

The school district’s transportation supervisor, Benjamin Coulter, responded that “we are addressing the issue with the driver.”

National Transportation Safety Board Chairman Christopher A. Hart said in a news conference this week that Walker had taken on a second job at an Amazon fulfillment center, and part of the agency’s investigation will look at whether fatigue played a role.

The bus driver had also complained to administrators that students would not listen to him when he told them not to stand in the bus or sit with their backs facing the front. The driver submitted 10 names of students he said were misbehaving. The transportation supervisor responded that the driver may have had some legitimate safety concerns but that the driver shouldn’t report so many students.

“I don’t want the driver to become discouraged, but he can’t be turning 10 referrals in a day to you, either,” Coulter wrote.

Woodmore Principal Brenda Adamson-Cothran asked for video of the bus leaving campus, noting that a few days earlier “the driver, in my opinion, was driving way too fast when he pulled out of our school.”

It’s unclear what the video showed; hyperlinks to it are redacted in the records.

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