Deputy Danny and Taoiseach Leo Agree on Over 70s School Bus Drivers

Deputy Danny Healy Rae and Taoiseach Leo Varadkar find themselves in agreement on the issues of Bus Éireann policy on female and male over 70 school-bus drivers.

Deputy Danny Healy Rae said that he’s glad that the Minister for Education, Norma Foley is giving consideration to extending the age limit for school bus drivers to over 70’s.

“I have been asking for this and have raised it constantly in Dáil Éireann over the last number of years and as recently as last Wednesday under questions on policy or legislation.

Deputy Danny Healy Rae’s Question on the matter:

Dáil Éireann debate questions on policy or legislation – Wednesday, February 21st 2024.

Bus Éireann has the contract for delivering the school bus transport system, which takes all of our national and secondary school children to schools.

It is a fact that there is a scarcity of school bus drivers. However, drivers of 70 years of age are no longer considered by Bus Éireann. It will not allow them to drive buses. Of course the safety of children is of paramount importance.

Age Discrimination

There is discrimination against men and women when they become 70 years of age. They can drive lorries and buses all over the country. It is ironic that they can drive the same children to a football match, a picnic or whatever after school. They can drive in a private capacity.

I will say one thing: it could be a condition that they would be medically assessed by doctors appointed by Bus Éireann.

The Taoiseach in Reply

I thank the Deputy. I have been trying to get to the bottom of this for more than a year now. I have not received a straight answer or an adequate explanation. It would appear to be a Bus Éireann or CIÉ rule rather than a Government rule because we allow people to drive lorries into their 70s. People can be members of this house into their 70s or 80s. It is not about age; it is about someone’s physical or mental capacity.

An Annual Check

I agree that a workable solution might be an annual check of some sort, as the deputy mentioned.

I think it may be a Bus Éireann rule that is tied in some ways to industrial relations agreements, pensions and so on. I am trying to get to the bottom of it.

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