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Fairfax Co. moms seek accountability, say their kids were assaulted on special needs school bus

Moms seek accountability, say their kids were assaulted on special needs school bus

One afternoon in early March, Daniela watched as her daughter got off the bus as she regularly did.

She noticed bumps on her face and immediately got scared. She urgently called Springfield Estates Elementary School, where her daughter, who is autistic, is in kindergarten. The bus transports fewer than 10 students with disabilities home every day, she said.

When Daniela, who asked not to be fully named, asked her daughter what happened, she responded, 鈥淏oo-boo, mommy. Band-Aid! Band-Aid!鈥

It took over a week, but then Daniela asked to review video footage from the bus. It showed another student inappropriately touching her daughter, she said.

鈥淚 saw the kid touch my daughter, put his hands in her private parts, and then he was pushing my daughter鈥檚 hands in his private parts,鈥 Daniela said.

She contacted police to make them aware, and learned other students may have experienced something similar.

When Lisa Centeno, another mom of a kindergarten-aged son, learned about it, she contacted the principal immediately. Then, she learned her son, who is also autistic, had been assaulted on the school bus.

Video footage, Centeno said, showed another student who appeared to be hitting the back of her son鈥檚 head and pushing it.

Now, the Springfield moms are urging the school system to make sure students with disabilities across the county are treated properly.

鈥淲e鈥檙e supposed to send our kids from school, because we鈥檙e supposed to think they鈥檙e safe, right?鈥 Daniela said. 鈥淭hey need to be training, they need to be following up. The drivers, the attendants, everything.鈥

In a statement, a school system spokesman said the region assistant superintendent, chief of schools and transportation department are in touch with the impacted families to address their concerns.

鈥淒ue to state and federal privacy laws, we cannot comment on specific cases about individual students,鈥 the district said in a statement.

Meanwhile, detectives from Fairfax County police鈥檚 Child Abuse Squad are investigating and 鈥渨orking closely with Fairfax County Public Schools to gather all relevant information,鈥 the department said.

The bus driver, the moms said, has been placed on administrative leave.

At the start of the school year, there was an attendant on the bus, Centeno said, but after a few weeks, that changed.

The pair had been pleading to get extra help because their kids 鈥渒ept unbuckling themselves, getting up, standing up before the bus actually came to a stop. They were mostly all the time in distress getting off the bus, and now it kind of makes sense why they were unbuckling themselves prematurely,鈥 Centeno said.

Their advocacy was unsuccessful, Centeno said, because a bus attendant isn鈥檛 in their students鈥 Individualized Education Programs, or IEPs. She was also told the department was experiencing staffing challenges.

鈥淲e鈥檙e trying to advocate so there is an aide on every special needs bus, regardless if it鈥檚 in the IEP or not,鈥 Centeno said.

A school system spokesman said there are now two bus attendants on that bus each afternoon, but Daniela and Centeno鈥檚 kids are now on a different one.

鈥淪he can鈥檛 say to me, 鈥楳ommy, this has happened to me. Mommy, somebody鈥檚 touching me. Mommy, this kid鈥檚 doing something with me. And that鈥檚 so frustrating for me and my husband,鈥 Daniela said.

The school district is still reviewing more video footage, Daniela and Centeno said, but they鈥檙e hoping for an apology from the school system鈥檚 transportation department and for accountability, so that other parents of students with disabilities can feel comfortable putting their kids on a similar bus.

鈥淲e鈥檙e advocating for our kids, but other parents need to be aware of the situation that they鈥檙e putting their kids in, getting on the bus,鈥 Centeno said.

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Scott Gelman

Scott Gelman is a digital editor and writer for WTOP. A South Florida native, Scott graduated from the University of Maryland in 2019. During his time in College Park, he worked for The Diamondback, the school鈥檚 student newspaper.

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