On a recent morning of fresh snow, Victoria seventh-grader Emma Aspelin and her father, Paul, headed out to Emma's school-bus stop. When Paul didn't return to the house as quickly as usual, mom Michelle found herself wondering.
Was the bus late? Would it come at all? Had it slipped off an icy road?
Thanks to a new application recently made available to parents in the Eastern Carver County School District, she was able to use her cellphone to get answers.
"I could see that her bus was, like, 20 minutes late," Michelle Aspelin said. "Her bus finally got [here and] I could follow the bus along the route to get to school. I was thankful to have [the application] and see it."
The southwest metro school district, which serves 9,400 students from Victoria, Carver, Chanhassen and Chaska, rolled out the Web-based MyStop application on Jan. 29. It lets parents view up-to-the-minute GPS information on school-bus whereabouts. While other metro area districts are testing pilot versions, Eastern Carver County appears to be the only metro district that has fully implemented the technology. Other districts say they'll soon follow suit.
Like many area school districts, Eastern Carver County already had GPS technology in its 115 buses, which ferry about 8,000 riders daily, according to district transportation coordinator John Thomas. Now that information is made available to parents, guardians and students via a user-specific login and password. Users can see location information about only their own bus, as well as its estimated time of arrival at their assigned stop, Thomas said. Parents also can track their bus on their phones, tablets and computers.
Implementing MyStop was free. It was an additional feature offered by Versatrans, the company that oversees the district's GPS technology, Thomas said.
Thomas said the application should help reduce the number of phone calls from parents with questions and worries about bus times. In a winter as arduous as this one, that's been very valuable, he said.