Piggyback Network connects parents while HopSkipDrive contracts directly with school districts to assist students without reliable transportation. https://t.co/J08rjU0POB
“The people who had the money and the privilege were able to figure out other situations like rearranging their work schedules,” she said. “People who didn’t, some had to pull their kids out of school.” -parent Erin
@APNews describes a solution: @HopSkipDrive.
#twill
Thank you, @AP for covering the innovative ways caregivers and districts are solving school transportation challenges, including the great video of a Detroit CareDriver!
https://t.co/JsyD9jCht6
A simple, yet profoundly impactful, solution to school challenges lies in bolstering student transportation to best utilize resources. Durham Public Schools' busing is now reduced to 4 days a week. ABC 11 evaluates a solution.
https://t.co/Dx1rZVCxQL
"In an effort to address the shortage and ensure all students can travel to school, many districts have contracts with alternative transportation solutions providers like HopSkipDrive."
The school commute is turning into a nightmare for many families, as cities across the US grapple with a severe driver shortage https://t.co/rTho1dgm78
@MadelineRConway “ … the problem that Democrats have here is that people who really care about abortion and are single-issue pro-choice voters are already all voting Democratic. If you dive into the polling, they are already squeezing every bit of juice out of young college-educated women.”
Many election officials are already doing 12 hour days. Officials in Clark County, WA will now tack on several more hours to contact these voters.
This is who works our elections. Not the caricature villains created by election fraud fan fiction.
The only people you hurt when you cancel your @washingtonpost subscription are the reporters who did not make that decision, are in a dying industry and who do the groundwork to feed the news to on air anchors and TV reporters.
Jeff Bezos couldn’t give less of a sh*t about you cancelling your $120 a year compared to the $12 billion he makes annually.
I don't belong to Amazon Prime.
I do subscribe to the Washington Post, which out of years-long habit remains the first paper I open every morning, and will continue to do so, thanks to all the great journalists working there.
I understand the anger at Jeff Bezos and the Washington Post for its endorsement decision, but cancelling your subscription means less revenue to pay all the Post's reporters. Do what you gotta do but Bezos won't feel it in his pocket while some great journalists might.