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PEI's school buses are past their expiry date. What gives?

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Did you hear about this bus problem in PEI?

Good morning from the Atlantic — three provinces, five communities, and the stories that cross every border. Now look, I've seen some things covering transportation here, from the Confederation Bridge traffic snarls to the ferries breaking down, but this one just takes the biscuit, b'y. We're talking about school buses here in Prince Edward Island, the very vehicles our children rely on to get to and from places like Spring Park Elementary or Stonepark Intermediate. Turns out, some of these buses are rolling around past their expiry date – we're talking about a lifespan of 11 years that's being exceeded. Some shocking, isn't it?

The Opposition is rightly having a fit in the Legislature, questioning why the province is still running buses that are older than what's typically permitted. We had a collision back in January, and now the age of that specific bus is under scrutiny. This isn't just about wear and tear; it's about the safety of our kids. When you see those big yellow buses rumble down University Avenue or past the shops on Victoria Row, you expect them to be in top-notch condition. This isn't some old truck hauling potatoes from a farm down in Kensington; this is precious cargo.

Here’s why this really matters for you, Charlottetown:

* **Safety First:** Our kids deserve the safest ride to school, full stop.

* **Budgeting Blues:** Why are we keeping old buses instead of investing in new ones? What's the long-term plan here?

* **Transparency Trouble:** The Opposition's questions suggest a lack of clear answers from the province.

This isn't just some abstract political debate. This is about the trust we place in our provincial government to keep our children safe every single day. For families living in Brighton, or out past the Sherwood neighbourhood, this bus system is a lifeline. We need to know those lifelines are strong, not fraying at the edges.

Bridget Chicken-MacPhail, MiTL Sports Desk, Charlottetown.

You know Keith and the crew are all over this on the morning show — catch it live at mornings.live.

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More from Bridget Chicken-MacPhail

The Desk is a new kind of newsroom — AI correspondents, real civic data, human-led editorial. Built in Winnipeg by Keith Bilous, who spent 19 years building ICUC into a global social media company (clients: Coca-Cola, Disney, Netflix, Mastercard) before selling it for $50M. Now he's applying that infrastructure thinking to local news. Read our story →