School transport in India is undergoing a major shift. In many cities, private vans and shared passenger vehicles are slowly replacing official school buses. Parents choose them for lower cost and doorstep convenience. But safety experts warn that most of these vans do not meet school transport safety guidelines, putting children at serious risk. From unverified drivers to unsafe CNG installations and overcrowding, the school van safety issue is growing quietly and urgently.
Why Parents Are Shifting Away From School Buses
Parents cite four main reasons for preferring private vans:

- School buses often do not enter narrow residential lanes
- Private vans pick up from the doorstep
- Vans can adjust timings for tuition and activities
- Van services are usually 30–45% cheaper than school bus fees
However, convenience is often being prioritized over safety — sometimes without families realizing the risks.
What the Rules Actually Require (But Are Often Ignored)
According to official school transport guidelines from the Ministry of Road Transport & State Transport Departments, vehicles carrying school children must have:
- Commercial vehicle permit
- Driver with minimum 5 years’ experience
- Police verification of driver and helper
- Insurance for passenger-carrying commercial use
- Speed governor
- Seat belts for all children
- First-aid box and fire extinguisher
- Approved CNG/LPG cylinder installation
- Emergency contact numbers displayed
However, field observations show many private vans fail to meet most of these requirements.
CNG Cylinder Safety: A Serious Overlooked Risk
In many private vans:
- Cylinders are locally fitted in roadside garages
- Safety enclosure is missing
- Leak checks are not performed
- The cylinder is placed close to seating area
This increases the risk of fire or explosion inside a vehicle carrying children.
Overcrowding in Vans
Many vans designed for 8 passengers regularly carry:
- 14 to 20 children, especially during school peak hours
Children are often seen sitting:
- On temporary stools
- On the floor
- Near the sliding door
This overcrowding reduces stability, evacuation ability, and crash survival space.

WhatsApp Groups Create Informal Transport Networks
In most neighborhoods, drivers coordinate with parents through WhatsApp groups.
This makes communication easy, but it also means:
- No formal accountability
- No written agreement
- No verification trail
- Drivers and helpers may change frequently without notice
A parent from South Delhi said:
“We only know the driver’s first name. We don’t know where he lives. That is scary when you think deeply.”
Why Schools Often Don’t Intervene
Many private schools now outsource transport or leave it to parents to arrange.
This leads to a responsibility gap:
| Situation | Result |
|---|---|
| Accident happens | Parents blame school |
| School responds | School claims transport was private |
| Operator role | Operator may not be traceable |
This legal and operational grey area increases risk.
Real Incidents Highlight the Risk
Recent reported cases include:
- Van fire due to CNG leakage (Maharashtra)
- Overloaded van overturning (Uttar Pradesh)
- Unverified driver stopped near school (Haryana)
- Unauthorized van seized in crackdown (Bengaluru)
In nearly every case — safety guidelines were ignored.
FAQs
Q1) Is it illegal to send children in private vans?
Not illegal by itself.
But the van must have:
- Commercial/student transport permit
- Police-verified driver
- Proper insurance
- Safety equipment
Most vans do not follow these rules, which increases risk.
Q2) How can parents check if the van is legally compliant?
Ask for these documents:
| Document | Must Have |
|---|---|
| RC | Should show Commercial / Transport use |
| Permit | Should mention School / Student Transport |
| Driver’s License | Commercial LMV-TR license, not private |
| Police Verification Slip | With stamp & recent date |
| CNG/LPG Approval Certificate | Must match cylinder fitted |
If any document is missing, the van is not compliant.
Q3) Why do parents still choose vans despite knowing risks?
Because vans are:
- Convenient
- Affordable
- Flexible
- Available at doorstep
Parents often assume “everyone else sends in the van, so it must be fine.”
Awareness, not intention, is the missing link.
Q4) Are school buses always safer?
School buses generally:
- Follow stricter safety rules
- Have trained and verified drivers
- Are monitored by school administration
Private vans depend entirely on the operator’s ethics and cost-cutting pressure.
Q5) What is the safest way to continue using private vans?
- Meet the driver personally
- Ask for documentation copies
- Check seating capacity and cylinder placement
- Coordinate a parent monitoring group
- Ensure no child sits near sliding door or cylinder box
Safety improves when parents collectively insist on standards.
What is a “School Van” According to Indian Transport Rules?
A school van is any commercial passenger vehicle carrying school students under a valid School/Student Transport Permit issued by the Regional Transport Office (RTO).
If a van does not have this permit, it is not legally allowed to transport children to school.
What Needs to Change
Parents Need To
- Ask for documents
- Demand cylinder safety checks
- Avoid “cheapest option” mindset
Schools Need To
- Declare approved van operator lists
- Facilitate background checks
- Share safety guidelines in PTMs
Authorities Need To
- Conduct morning & afternoon inspection drives near school gates
- Simplify permit processes for small operators
Child safety cannot depend on convenience.
