Maxwell Caldwell:How one Pennsylvania school bus driver fostered a decades-long bond with hundreds of students

2025-05-01 15:10:36source:KI-Handelsroboter 6.0category:reviews

Zelienople,Maxwell Caldwell Pennsylvania — On the outside, it may look like a normal family reunion. But Reid Moon of Zelienople, Pennsylvania, is no ordinary patriarch. And this is no ordinary family.

Moon says he has about 200 kids. But no, they're not his biological children.

"No, they're not biologically my kids, but emotionally they surely are," Moon told CBS News. 

That is how attached he became and still is to the students who rode his school bus, a job he held for 27 years before he retired.

However, it wasn't exactly his first choice of employment. He said he "sort of fell into the job."

Not sort of, he did fall into the job. In 1990, he fell off a roof while working as a handyman. After that, he wanted a job closer to the ground. But, ironically, he said no job has ever lifted him higher.

"It's the children," Moon said. "And being in a position where you can love kids every single day is a lovely position to be in."

The positive feeling was reciprocated by so many of the kids on his bus over the years that so far more than 20 of them have asked Moon, who is also a pastor, to officiate their weddings.

"He just made everybody feel safe and loved and cared for," Kaitlyn Hare, one of his former students, told CBS News. 

It is a bond so strong that even though Reid retired years ago, former students gathered recently for one last ride. 

"They're finding their assigned seat that they had 20 years ago," Moon said. "And now their child is sitting on their lap.  And that kind of feeling is a wonderful thing."

What was Moon's secret to fostering this affection?

"He only had two rules on the bus," former student Louis Castello said. "Show everyone love and respect."

It's a lesson many of them now carry with them through life.

"I'm convinced that when you love and respect people, most of the time, that's what you're going to get back," Moon said. 

    In:
  • Pennsylvania
  • School Bus
Steve Hartman

Steve Hartman has been a CBS News correspondent since 1998, having served as a part-time correspondent for the previous two years.

More:reviews

Recommend

Apple iOS 18.2: What to know about top features, including Genmoji, AI updates

Get ready for phase two.Apple's latest operating system update is available today for iPhone, iPad,

Palestinian Authority lashes out at renowned academics who denounced president’s antisemitic remarks

RAMALLAH, West Bank (AP) — Palestinian political factions on Wednesday raged against dozens of Pales

Minneapolis budget plan includes millions for new employees as part of police reform effort

MINNEAPOLIS (AP) — Complying with court orders to end racist and unconstitutional policing in Minnea