Overcast to rainy skies robbed the 2018-19 school year of a sunny start on Tuesday, but optimism was in the air when classes got back into session for many Minnesota children.
Some officials were nervous about buses arriving on time. But at many entrances across the state, the scene was like that at Capitol Hill Gifted and Talented Magnet School in St. Paul, where St. Paul Mayor Melvin Carter said efforts by kids to play it cool were betrayed by big grins as staff members greeted the students with their own warm smiles.
"I think the energy you see across this city today bodes well for this school year, and it bodes well for our city in the future," he said.
Wanted: School bus drivers
Parents and students headed to bus stops in the Osseo Area School District braced for potential late arrivals of the familiar yellow fleet.
A healthy economy has left many districts and bus companies scrambling to find school bus drivers, and as a result, Osseo officials notified families to wait at least 10 to 15 minutes past their scheduled pickup times if buses were running late.
There and elsewhere, drivers were being brought in from other communities to help, and chances were that some pinch hitters were not yet up to speed with their routes.
Jenifer Doyle, a parent in the Osseo district, knows the issue well. She works for First Student, a bus company that serves Osseo and also handles 136 routes for the St. Paul Public Schools.
"This is honestly the biggest driver shortage we've had in my memory," said Doyle, who has been with First Student for 15 years.