Franklin County, News, Russellville
 By  Kellie Singleton Published 
6:04 am Saturday, August 13, 2011

City schools to operate own buses

Students who ride the bus in the Russellville City School System will soon be riding on buses the school system owns.

Superintendent Rex Mayfield said the system was on schedule to begin transporting its own students by Oct. 1.

Historically, the Franklin County Board of Education has shouldered the responsibility for the transportation system of both the county and the city schools, but last October officials reached an agreement to finally have separate transportation systems.

Mayfield said when the State Department of Education informed school officials they would have to stop using the county school system’s transportation, they were given one of two options: provide their own transportation or stop providing transportation altogether, since city school systems have that option.

But Mayfield said he didn’t feel like taking away buses from the students who depend on them would be the right thing to do.

“City schools do have the option to just not provide their students with transportation, but we have 900 students who rides the bus to school every day and I know firsthand how important that is,” Mayfield said.

“When I was going to school, I lived at the very last house on the route and I would have had no other way to get to school had it not been for buses. I wouldn’t want to take away that same opportunity for our students today.”

Busing its own students will of course be an extra expense for the city school system, but its one Mayfield said was necessary, especially when considering the alternative.

“If we chose not to bus the students, we could feasibly have 900 students who could decide to go somewhere else, which could mean a loss of 50 or more teachers,” Mayfield said. “This was just the best decision for everyone.”

As of Oct. 1, FCS will transfer the titles of 16 buses to RCS. These buses will include twelve 2009 model buses and four 1999 model buses, and RCS will assume the unpaid indebtedness on the 2009 buses.

RCS is also in the process of having their own transportation building built to house the buses on the corner of Clay Avenue and Rube Currington Drive behind Russellville Elementary School.

Funding for the $372,000 building was provided through existing capital funds.

“This really won’t have much of an affect on the students because we will employ the same bus drivers for the same buses as of Oct. 1,” Mayfield said. “The kids will ride the same bus they always have and have the same bus driver. The only difference will be that the bus drivers are employed by Russellville City instead of Franklin County and the buses will be our responsibility.”

Also on Franklin County Times
Cameras give law enforcement a leg up
Main, News, Russellville, ...
Kevin Taylor For the FCT 
March 25, 2026
RUSSELLVILLE – Police Chief Chris Hargett was at a conference in 2020 and while passing by some of the vendors there, he noticed one promoting a camer...
Defense project has public, vets ‘excited’
Main, News, Z - News Main
By Brady Petree and Addi Broadfoot 
March 25, 2026
BARTON— The queue of people clamoring to get into the Hadrian facility on Friday was lined down the sidewalk as members of the public and military vet...
Flanagan enjoys romance book cover modeling
Main, News, Phil Campbell, ...
María Camp maria.camp@franklincountytimes.com 
March 25, 2026
PHIL CAMPBELL — What started as a few comedy videos on TikTok has grown into a career that has taken Andrew Flanagan from a welding job to romance nov...
Still waiting for rural ambulance answers
Columnists, Opinion
March 25, 2026
Rural Alabama has been waiting decades for access to affordable health services — and despite the empty promises of a bill funneling millions of dolla...
GFWC focuses on Alzheimer’s
Columnists, Opinion
HERE AND NOW
March 25, 2026
The GFWC Book Lovers Study Club focused on Alzheimer’s awareness during its March meeting at Russellville First Baptist Church. Alzheimer’s disease gr...
Pitching is key focus for Patriots
College Sports, Sports
By Brady Petree For the FCT 
March 25, 2026
The 2024-25 collegiate baseball season was a solid one for the Northwest Shoals Community College Patriots and head coach David Langston knows what it...
Patriots build on strengths for fourth season
College Sports, Sports
By Addi Broadfoot For the FCT 
March 25, 2026
The softball program at Northwest-Shoals Community College continues to grow as it enters its fourth season since being relaunched. Head coach Angel B...
RHS boys soccer aiming for state run
B: Spring Sports, High School Sports, Russellville Golden Tigers, ...
By Addi Broadfoot For the FCT 
March 25, 2026
RUSSELLVILLE — The boys soccer team is off to a strong start this season and is aiming for a deep playoff run. Coach Larsen Plyler said the team has t...

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *