Kentucky's largest school district had to cancel class for two days so it could overhaul a 'disastrous' new bus system that left kids on buses until 10 p.m.
Kentucky's largest school district had to cancel class for two days so it could overhaul a 'disastrous' new bus system that left kids on buses until 10 p.m.

Kentucky's largest school district had to cancel class for two days so it could overhaul a 'disastrous' new bus system that left kids on buses until 10 p.m.

After clicking on several of the many, many links in that article, that without exception all lead to completely unrelated topics, I'm still left with the question: what was the reason kids were stuck on the bus till 10p.m.?
Driver shortage led the county to reconfigure school bus routes trying to "stretch" existing drivers, but the new routes made things even worse. Kids weren't stuck on the bus, they were stuck waiting for buses at bus stops.
Better articles:
The title of this post is terrible then
If instead of clicking all the links you had read the article, it's explained:
They were short on bus drivers, and they hired a firm to come up with a plan that would "make it work". Specifics of the routes aren't given, but I'd imagine that they were completely ridiculous for any kids to have still been on buses six or seven hours after school got out.
They could've hired at least 3 more drivers with that money.
Probably 6 with how little they pay
Really terrible bus routes trying to skate by with a miniumum of drivers.
They weren’t stuck on buses they were waiting on buses to arrive. There were school staff with them.
Damn, I would have ubered myself to pickup my kid if they were still there that long. I know some folks might not have the means, but I personally would have figured something out instead of letting my child wait at school until 10 pm.
Yeah I find the idea of that happening very unlikely. You'd think the parents would hunting down their kids before that happened.
My kid is in high school, and they communicate about emergencies through text, email, and automated calls. There are lots of jobs, especially low-paying ones, that will not let you check your phone during your shift, and they're certainly not going to be okay with you leaving early to go pick up your kid. If the choice is "leave to pick up kid (who you know is safe with teachers), get fired," versus "leave kid (who you know is safe with teachers), keep job," it's pretty simple math.
I've initially had the same reaction but on second thought probably not everybody can afford to drop everything and go looking for their kid. Assuming of course they cared, they were told about it etc.
The linked article is terrible, I've linked a few better ones. Not all kids got home at 10 PM, that was just the last of them.
The reason was to generate a click bait headline.