'My kids could be dead': School bus leaves kids, 4 and 6, at empty house during storm - Action News
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Nova Scotia

'My kids could be dead': School bus leaves kids, 4 and 6, at empty house during storm

After their Porters Lake, N.S., school closed early due to a power outage Thursday morning, Kalia and Zotique Guimond were dropped off outside their house. They were home alone for two hours.

Alia Guimond says cole des Beaux-Marais 'neglected my children' by leaving children alone in storm

Zotique, 6, and Kalia Guimond, 4, were at home alone for two hours after a school bus dropped them off to an empty house. (Submitted by Alia Guimond)

A Nova Scotia couple say theirfour- and six-year-old children were put on a bus they had never ridden beforeand were dropped off at an empty home without their parent's knowledgeafter a power outage at their school.

Alia Guimond said if her family's home in Porters Lake hadn't been mistakenly left unlocked, the kids would have been stuck outside on their own during Thursday's snow and rain storm.

"Nobody knew where they were. If the door had been locked, where would they have gone?" said Guimond."They entered into my house and were at home by themselves for two hours alone."

Her daughter, Kalia, is in preschool and her son, Zotique, who turned six last week, is in Grade Primary atcoledesBeaux-Maraisin Porters Lake. It was one of about 20 schools in the Halifax area that lost electricity Thursday morning. As a result, theschool dismissed students early.

Guimond, a junior high teacher at another school, only learned of the situation during her lunch break. So too did her husband, Jonathan Guimond, who works for the navy and doesn't have access to his personal phone while on a ship.

He managed to reacha teacher's aide fromcoledesBeaux-Marais, who told him his children had been put on a bus.

"I was like, what do you mean they're on the bus? There's nobody at home," he told Radio-Canada.

School didn't wait to hear from parents

He reached his wife and both were very worried. He asked a neighbour to check. The neighboursaw footprints in the snowheading to the Guimondhome and found thekids had let themselves in and fixed themselves some lunch.

The neighbour brought them to his house.

"When they cancel school, they send emails and text messages to all the parents no acknowledgement. That's what the problem is they should be contacting people and getting acknowledgement," Jonathan Guimond said.

"We don't want to wait until somebody's kid becomes an example."

Alia Guimond drives her two young children to cole des Beaux-Marais in Porters Lake. They had never taken a bus home before Thursday. (Submitted by Alia Guimond)

Kate Walden, a spokesperson for Stock Transportation, the company that runs the school-bus service, said protocol dictates that drivers make sure there is a parent or guardian "within sight to receive students of this age."

"The driver watched the students go into the house, and did not confirm that a parent or guardian received them," she said in an email to CBC. "We have discussed protocol with the driver, and we sincerely apologize to our parents for this matter."

School board says protocol wasn't followed

Marie-AndreLaflamme, a spokesperson with Conseilscolaireacadienprovincial,said if contact hasn't been made with a parent, children are supposed be looked after "one way or another" by the school.

"Kids will stay at school or will return to school if they are unable to be dropped off at home," she said in an email.

Established procedures were not followed in this case,Laflammesaid.

"It is our expectation that the procedures established for these types of situations be respected," she said. "We are working internally with our administrative staff to ensure that these types of incidences do not reoccur."

Alia Guimond usually drives theirchildren to school and they'venever taken a school bus. She questions why they were allowed to get off the bus alone when they're too young to do so without an adult present.

"My children are lucky they made in the house and that nobody got hurt," she said. "My kids could be dead. They neglected my children."

Alia Guimond said she was 'having a meltdown' at work and called cole des Beaux-Marais in Porters Lake repeatedly. (Radio-Canada)

After learning coledesBeaux-Marais had closed for the day, Guimondsaid she couldn't reach anyone at the school. She thencontacted the school board in Dartmouth and they tracked the bus. At 12:45 p.m., Guimond said she learned what had happened.

She said she was "having a meltdown" at work and worried about the 70 km/h zone near their home.

"They should not have been on that school bus. I should have talked to an actual human beingto let me know what was happening with my kids," she said.

A neighbour found Guimond's younger children at home alone. (Submitted by Alia Guimond)

This isn't the first incident at the Porters Lake school. In October, a 10-year-old ended up on the wrong bus and her mother didn't know where she was for an hour.

Guimondsaid she called two months ago to ensure her work number was updated in the school's system since she can't check her email while teaching.

She said she was told Thursday that because the power was out, staff couldn't call. But she said her work information would have been accessible online and there should have been a paper copy.

"The ball was dropped the entire way through that situation," she said."My husband asked my son, who is six, what he would have done if the door was locked and he said he would've gone to sit under the deck because it was cold and raining."

With files from Richard Woodbury and Nahila Bendali Amor