Bus parking site will stay where it is

SHARON — First Selectman Malcolm Brown said the Board of Selectmen is giving up on its plan to move the parking site for the town’s school buses.

The board had hoped to relocate the garage from its current site on Mitcheltown Road. The town pays $12,000 a year to park buses there.

At the last regular meeting, on Feb. 10, Brown said the selectmen are passing the issue over to the Board of Education.

“This is a school board issue more than it is [a selectmen’s] issue,� Brown said. “We have spent a good deal of time researching this and trying to help everybody as best we can. But, in my personal opinion, having marched around and looked at different properties, I think this is a school board issue.�

Brown said state officials have unofficially ruled out the idea of parking school buses at a state-owned garage on Sharon Valley Road. The selectmen had met with state Department of Transportation  representatives in January to talk about moving the parking area to that garage.

“It’s certainly clear that their ruling is ‘no,’� Brown said. “From a liability point of view, they did not want us having school buses stored there.�

Sharon resident Bill Kelsey said the number one issue for any relocation of the school bus garage would be security.

“If you park them down at the town garage, you’re going to have to build a big high fence,� Kelsey said. “You’re going to have people tampering with the buses. At [the current location] no one is going to tamper with them. It’s always going to be good because there are people around there watching the buses.�

The Mitcheltown garage is in the middle of a residential neighborhood.

Brown mentioned that some nearby property owners have said school bus drivers idle their buses for long periods  in the morning before they go on their route.

“The school board should have a firm contract that says block heaters should be used properly through the night and buses should not exceed a three-minute idling time,� Brown said. “Just start up, idle for three minutes, then go.�

Sharon resident Florien Palmer said he was told by Region One Superintendent Patricia Chamberlain that any enforcement of idling laws would have to be done by Brown and not the district.

“I’ve offered to do that,� Brown said. “I have had standing offers from persons in the neighborhood to call me up at 5:30 in the morning and have me go down there and observe what’s going on. I have received no phone calls all winter.�

The school district includes the elementary schools in Sharon, Salisbury, Cornwall, North Canaan, Falls Village and Kent and the shared Housatonic Valley Regional High School. Bus service is contracted to outside companies; all the towns in the region hire All-star Transportation in Torrington.

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