20 Years of STN: Reader Recollections Troughout the next year, School Transportation News will publish thoughts from across the industry on the origins
of the magazine, which was first published in September 1991 by Editor Emeritus Bill Paul. Here are just a few of the approximately 150 responses gathered from a survey of readers conducted this past spring.
“When I first became a transportation supervisor six years
ago, I found your magazine to be very helpful. I would read all the articles that I believed would ever be beneficial to me. I found so many helpful articles that I was actually reading the magazine cover to cover. I still read a great deal of each magazine and still gain valuable information. I look forward
“Each month I pick up STN, and before reading it,
I scan to see if mention has been made of someone I know. I am continually amazed by how far- reaching STN is in coverage of issues throughout the country. Not just in the issues, but in a look at the people who work tirelessly to ensure we remain the safest form of surface transportation. I like the way you always cover the issues that concern us all in today’s environment.” — Brian J. Whitta, Bowling Green (Ohio) City
School District
to the arrival of STN every month, often taking time out of my day to read it cover to cover as soon as it gets here. STN is an important source of industry news that helps us all do a better job of providing safe and efficient service for our children.” — Dee Johnson, Madison (Ohio) Local Schools
“I have found that your articles are all informative; safety is my biggest interest.
I am in a very small area and we do some very tough winter driving of preschool special needs. So anything along these lines is of great interest to me.” — Sharon Lounsbery, A&E Transport, Oswego, N.Y.
“Te articles are the only way I keep up with changes and news of the
school bus industry. Te one article that helped the most was about the Arkansas School Bus Mechanics Association, which led me to attend the premier mechanics training workshops in the nation.” — Michael A Goben, Dallas Center-Grimes (Iowa) Community Schools
Unparalleled safety now comes standard.
At C.E. White Co., we realize that these are difficult times for school districts. Three-point seat belts may be the safest choice for your buses but may not be the most economically feasible option. And retrofitting or exchanging seats at a later date just doesn’t make sense.
SB11 Quasi-Static
In celebration of our 75th year in business, we are offering the ability to purchase any size or model of our standard school bus seat with the convertible option. This allows you to convert to a 3pt lap/shoulder belt or Integrated Child Restraint seat at a later date. Simply add the belt or insert kit when it is economically feasible without having to exchange or discard any part of the seat that you have already purchased.
Retro Fit Kit CR11
®
12 School Transportation News Magazine November 2011 419.492.2157 |
www.cewhite.com
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