Autistic boy left on locked school bus for hours

Link: https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/ce81d2mzv4jo
Credit: Jonny Humphries, BBC News, Liverpool
Archive: https://archive.ph/wip/VnhYw

c5628960-2f4a-11f0-a657-b593c9d46647.jpg.webp

Thomas, 12, has complex health needs including severe asthma and kidney problems

A vulnerable autistic schoolboy "could have died" after being left on a locked school bus for more than two hours, his mother said.

Jennifer Evans said her 12-year-old son Thomas was only discovered when he sounded the horn.

Ms Evans, from Stockbridge Village in Merseyside, told the BBC she had done "nothing but cry" after being told her son had been driven back to a bus depot in Kirkby instead of being dropped off at school.

The bus company, Knowsley-based Supreme Executive Travel, apologised for the 24 April incident, said it had conducted a full investigation, and sacked a member of staff.

"I've barely slept," 39-year-old Ms Evans said.

"The thought of him going out of this house now really frightens me because it just goes to show how vulnerable he is when I'm not there to protect him.

"I'm putting all my trust in these strangers and I'm so scared because you don't really know a person, do you? And then these things happen.

"It just really makes you just want to wrap him up in cotton wool."

7ca1b330-2f4b-11f0-a657-b593c9d46647.jpg.webp

Alt Bridge School said it was "truly sorry" for its part in Thomas's ordeal

Thomas, who has complex needs, was supposed to have been dropped off at Alt Bridge Secondary School, which caters to children with special educational needs, in Huyton at just after 09:30 BST.

An investigation report, seen by the BBC, said school staff were instead called by Supreme Executive Travel at 11:45 to say Thomas had been found at the depot.

Alt Bridge has also said it was "truly sorry" for its part in Thomas's ordeal and acknowledged a "combination of things" went wrong that morning with handover procedures.

It said a safeguarding incident in the school had also delayed staff from contacting Ms Evans to ask where Thomas was.

Ms Evans said she was contacted by a manager at Supreme Executive Travel around the same time. She told her Thomas had been found after sounding the horn on the bus.

She said: "My son suffered that day. He could've died really.

"I know it sounds drastic, but he could have because of his severe asthma."

She said in January 2024, Thomas had suffered an asthma attack so severe he stopped breathing and she had to perform CPR until an ambulance arrived.

Ms Evans said Thomas also has very low kidney function, which meant that not being able to go to the toilet for an extended period could have had serious repercussions.

'I want answers'​


Thomas, who can only repeat back words that are said to him and is considered non-verbal, had been unable to tell his mother his feelings about what happened.

But she said he had suffered from night terrors since that day, and that she suspected they were caused by the trauma of being locked on the bus.

Ms Evans also said she has been frustrated by the response of Supreme Executive Travel, who she accused of not answering her questions.

"I want answers, I want the company to be held accountable for their actions," she said.

Dean Dumbell, group chief executive for Supreme Executive Travel, told the BBC: "We take full responsibility for this situation and are committed to ensuring that similar incidents are avoided in the future.

"Within 24 hours of the incident, the entire organisation underwent an emergency briefing and further training to reinforce the robust protocols we already have in place."

Mr Dumbell said a letter of apology had been written and sent to Ms Evans on 6 May, which she said she had not received.

Knowsley Council, which commissioned Supreme Executive Travel to provide transport to Alt Bridge, said a Local Authority Designated Officer (LADO) investigation had taken place.

A spokesperson said: "A number of issues were highlighted where processes were not followed, and these have been picked up directly with the transport provider and the school."

A statement from Alt Bridge added: "Lessons have been learned and additional preventive measures have been introduced by school."
 
You are absolutely correct, however...

He was already enrolled in a Special Ed. school. I feel like this is the main reason why this particular incident is more worrying then what is normally expected for ones that are similar to it. There should've, nay, there must've been procedures (the most obvious one being the presence of a monitor presiding over the children in the bus) in place to prevent this kind of potentially trauma-inducing mishap from happening to any of the students, yet it still happened.
If we read between the lines and hazard a guess at what happened, I would say the little shit was hiding underneath the seats or something and didn't get off. He's 12 years old and in secondary school. He's tarded but this isn't the first time he's ridden the bus to school.
 
"The thought of him going out of this house now really frightens me because it just goes to show how vulnerable he is when I'm not there to protect him.

"I'm putting all my trust in these strangers and I'm so scared because you don't really know a person, do you? And then these things happen.
Given how they're in the UK, they're doomed form the start. At least it wasn't a migrant that found the child.
 
I hate to say it, but if the kid is that retarded I don't know what sending him to school is going to accomplish in the first place. He needs a caretaker.
I don't know what it's like in the UK, but typically in the US, if you've got a kid like this on the short bus, you're gonna have an aide as well. This should never have happened.

Unfortunately, sometimes the aides don't really do shit. It's weird that one isn't mentioned in this article at all, considering he's definitely incapacitated enough to need one.
 
Last edited:
Even if it wasn't a special kid there's kids sleeping on the bus all the time the bus driver really needs to be checking everyone is off
Everyone on the bus is working on automatic and can't be bothered. The school bus, at least when I was in school (in the US), had signs on them that said "Count them down, count them across. Check for sleeping children." It's unfortunate that this scenario still happens.
 
Thomas, who can only repeat back words that are said to him and is considered non-verbal, had been unable to tell his mother his feelings about what happened.

But she said he had suffered from night terrors since that day, and that she suspected they were caused by the trauma of being locked on the bus.

Ascribing "night terrors" to a non-verbal autist who probably randomly screams all the time is probably a misdiagnosis, but I'm not a doctor either.
 
there's probably a cheap joke about mass transit systems and tismos liking them but I'm too lazy to make it
 
I hate to say it, but if the kid is that retarded I don't know what sending him to school is going to accomplish in the first place. He needs a caretaker.

it accomplishes mom getting a break and the kid getting socialized to eventually live in a group home cause mom isn't going to live forever

should this be done by the school system, well it's the UK so who cares
 
it accomplishes mom getting a break and the kid getting socialized to eventually live in a group home cause mom isn't going to live forever

should this be done by the school system, well it's the UK so who cares
100 years ago the parents would have let Junior go play by himself and hopefully he would be found floating face down in a rain barrel. It would give mom a break and nobody would have to worry about taking care of him when the parents die.
 
"It just really makes you just want to wrap him up in cotton wool."
I don't think that's something you should be saying about a kid who almost got cooked alive in a locked school bus. Mum giving away a sign she wants her kid dead but through smothering her way.
 
This happened to me and I was barely 4 years old, I fell asleep on a bus to sunday school and I woke up and it was incredibly hot. It was fucking terrifying, and I tried to pull the lever to open the doors but I was just too weak, I felt completely helpess and alone. Thank God a woman saw me screaming and banging on the doors, but I really don't understand how I got forgotten about to begin with because there was an older kid who was supposed to be watching me.
Nearly happened to me as a kid. I often went multiple nights without sleep due to insomnia. One day that caught up with me and I fell asleep on the bus. The bus driver woke me up and called my mom when he noticed something was off.
 
Yeah, the more I read it this is a cultural difference in our school structure.

In the US school buses are owned by the district so all of the drivers are state employees for both public schools and private, if they lease out public school buses for transit. A consequence of our size (heh) and population.

They're not definitely outsourced to Supreme Executive Travel, FFS...that sounds like some shady company you use for a party bus to the strip club for a bachelor party.
This was absolutely not the case in all US states 10 or so years ago. It could have changed but I highly doubt it.

Most are/were contracted by the school district, run by people you'd expect to see playing poker in the back room of a VFW.
 
I hate to say it, but if the kid is that retarded I don't know what sending him to school is going to accomplish in the first place. He needs a caretaker.
Sadly, the law of the land here in Britbongistan is that children have to go to school - no ifs, ands or buts.

In my old school in Merthyr Tydfil many years ago, kids like this one were put in alongside others - I've seen how they were treated not just by their peers but also by the teachers who also used words like 'mong' and 'spazz',

I did my best to look out for them, they couldn't help being how they were, and thankfully the school did have some sense as they employed a Special Needs teacher who was brilliant with them.

I agree that some children should not go to school, even special ones, as they cannot take any form of tuition on board.
 
I don't know what it's like in the UK, but typically in the US, if you've got a kid like this on the short bus, you're gonna have an aide as well. This should never have happened.

Unfortunately, sometimes the aides don't really do shit. It's weird that one isn't mentioned in this article at all, considering he's definitely incapacitated enough to need one.
Typically yes, the sped kids go on the sped bus with helpers. They usually get picked up from their houses as well as being dropped off after school.
very bizarre how this happened.

potato child(autocorrect tried to say chips) for sure. I’m a terrible human and almost laughed at the photo, oops.
 
This was absolutely not the case in all US states 10 or so years ago. It could have changed but I highly doubt it.

Most are/were contracted by the school district, run by people you'd expect to see playing poker in the back room of a VFW.
I can only speak to the way things are set up in my state, but I think a lot of them started changing it because of the cost and risk of liability to the district by having contractors handle it.
 
  • Like
Reactions: Tacgnol
Back