Castle Rock bus driver who left 40 elementary students at a busy intersection “didn’t know what to do”
Irving Johnson, the Castle Rock bus driver accused of forcing elementary students off the bus at a busy intersection, claims he didn't tell them to get off the bus.
The Castle Rock bus driver accused by parents of forcing their children off the bus at a busy intersection, some miles away from their homes, said that’s not what happened.
“That’s not correct, I said nothing to them,” bus driver Irving Johnson said in an interview to Denver7, referencing claims from parents that he told all 40 students to get off his bus. “I opened the door and they knew that this was at least close to where they were supposed to get off and they just were getting off.”
When all 40 students got off instead of a handful, Johnson said he was alarmed but was working to log which children departed the bus electronically, which he is required to do.
“I recognize I could have done better at that stop, when the rest of the kids got off the bus, and it was bizarre for me,” Johnson said in the video. “I think I was really stunned by it and I didn’t know what to do.”
Johnson said he’s driven for the Douglas County School District for the last seven years, but Monday was his first time on this specific route.
He said many of the Clear Sky Elementary School students were causing chaos as soon as they boarded the bus.
“They got on the bus, and they were in an uproar,” Johnson told Denver7. “…They were all over the seats, standing on them, up on the rack, doing pull-ups on the overhead luggage rack. And so, you know, I knew I had a difficult challenge to deal with.”
Multiple parents said their children reported Johnson threatening them and using vulgar language, but the bus driver said that wasn’t the case.
In an email sent Wednesday to families on the bus route, DCSD Chief Operations Officer Rich Cosgrove said the driver was a “relief driver” on the route and is no longer employed at the school district. At that time, Cosgrove did not identify the driver as Johnson.
Cosgrove said the bus was on its third of 12 stops when it stopped “just short” of the usual location, on the corner of Wolfensberger and Auburn, “leading to some confusion.”
Johnson claimed the error was caused by the DCSD tablet that provides him with directions malfunctioning, causing him to turn early.
Johnson should have immediately notified the district’s transportation dispatch when all the students exited the bus but failed to do so, Cosgrove said.
Cosgrove said the video footage from the bus can’t currently be shared due to the ongoing investigation with the Castle Rock Police Department. It’s not clear if criminal charges will be filed.
The Castle Rock Police Department declined to comment, citing the ongoing investigation.
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