The Equitable Access to Transportation Advisory Council (EATAC), in its first report released today outlined the elements that prevent equitable access to transportation — a lifeline to opportunity — for students in the United States.
Chronic absenteeism and other indications students aren’t regularly attending school, as recently flagged by the Biden-Harris administration, are signs that creative thinking around policy change and new solutions is needed. This is one of the driving forces behind the formation of the Council, which is made up of 10 highly qualified experts from various organizations devoted to transportation, child welfare, road safety, community planning, education, and technology.
“For us, extending equitable access to transportation means that first, every child can access transportation; and second, they can access a transportation mode that meets that child’sunique needs, connecting them to school, support services, extracurricular activities, and other critical parts of childhood,” wrote EATAC in “Transportation as an Opportunity Lifeline,” a report available here.
EATAC worked together to uncover the following forces leading to disparities in transportation access for vulnerable populations, considered to be students and families who face multiple layers of instability involving socioeconomic factors such as housing, food, or transportation insecurity; restraints in personal mobility; and medical conditions:
- Budget cuts
- Individualized student needs
- Policy changes and regulation requirements
- Systemic inequities
- Information access
- Route difficulties
- Unsafe roads and environments
- Lack of infrastructure
- School bus driver shortages
- Cost of purchasing and maintaining a safe vehicle
- Distance traveled
- Inaccessibility
“School rides, and transportation in general, are a lifeline to opportunity in the United States, but not all students have the safe, equitable access they deserve,” EATAC wrote in its report. “While this inequity is systemic and damaging — the result of compounding factors — it does present us with the opportunity to re-examine our traditional ways of doing things.”
To that end, after examining the devastating role mobility gaps can play in the lives of the 54 million students enrolled in U.S. schools, EATAC will next offer reasonable solutions and potential new policies within a second white paper.
Founding members of the Equitable Access to Transportation Advisory Council are as follows:
- Nadia Anderson, Ph.D., Senior Vice President, Chief of Staff and Strategy, Silicon Valley Leadership Group
- Kerry Chausmer, Program and Member Services Director, Governors Highway Safety Association
- Torine Creppy, President, Safe Kids Worldwide
- Vanessa Davis, Co-Manager, Foster Youth in Action
- Natalie Draisin, Director of the North American office, FIA Foundation
- Kim Dvorchak,, National Association of Counsel for Children
- Robert Enlow, President and CEO, EdChoice
- Ta’Londa Holland, Senior Director of Policy and Influence, Urban Strategies Inc.
- Zahra Marin, National Policy and Organizing Director, National Foster Youth Institute (NFYI)
- Kristie Stutler, Vice President of Policy and Influence, Urban Strategies Inc.
The Equitable Access to Transportation Advisory Council was established in March 2024, in partnership with HopSkipDrive, a technology company solving complex transportation challenges where there is a heightened need for safety, equity, and care. Learn more about EATAC here.
HopSkipDrive is a technology company that solves complex transportation challenges where there is a heightened need for safety, equity, and care. HopSkipDrive’s marketplace arranges care-centered transportation across 13 states, supplementing other transportation options by connecting kids, older adults, or anyone needing extra support, to highly-vetted caregivers on wheels, such as grandparents, babysitters, and nurses. HopSkipDrive also builds software and offers advisory services that solve the biggest transportation challenges facing schools and school districts around the country, including budget cuts, bus driver shortages, and reaching climate goals. HopSkipDrive currently partners with school districts, government agencies, and nonprofits, including supporting more than 10,000 schools. More than three million rides over 61 million miles have been completed through HopSkipDrive since the company was founded in 2014 by three working mothers.