Beginning today, every regular IndyGo bus
becomes a rolling Project Safe Place where children
can get help if they are in danger.
IndyGo buses will prominently display the yellow and
black Project Safe Way logos, working in partnership
with Children’s Bureau, Inc.
On the yellow, diamond-shaped Project Safe Place
sign, a pair of arms forms a protective circle around
a child. More than 150 IndyGo buses serving 29 fixed
routes will carry the prominent stickers and all
drivers are trained to provide immediate assistance
to children 17 and younger who are in distress.
IndyGo professional coach operators and
transportation supervisors have received procedural
training on how to handle and transport children who
need assistance and whom to call.
Announcing the launch of the Children’s Bureau and
IndyGo Safe Place partnership today are: Indianapolis
Mayor Greg Ballard; Ron Carpenter, president and CEO
of the Children’s Bureau; and Gilbert Holmes,
president and CEO of IndyGo.
Carpenter says, “Hundreds of children ride IndyGo
buses every day. And hundreds more see the buses in
their neighborhoods.
“Children should always be able to think than an
IndyGo bus is safe. Project Safe Place will protect
more children by moving out into the neighborhoods.
IndyGo is providing a tremendous service by actually
bringing a refuge to children who need emergency
help,” says Carpenter.
Holmes says “IndyGo professional coach operators are
often the eyes and ears on our city streets, so
adding Project Safe Place as a responsibility
reinforces the important role IndyGo plays in the
community beyond transporting more than 8.5 million
passengers annually.”
Across the U.S. and Canada, Project Safe Place is
offered by 48 out of 6,500 transit agencies.
The Children’s Bureau has sponsored Project Safe
Place in Indianapolis for 21 years. Perhaps a hundred
Marion County children each year come to a Project
Safe Place site such as a fire station,
Indianapolis-Marion County Public Library, YMCA, Boys
& Girls’ Clubs, Village Pantry or neighborhood
Post Offices. They are immediately given shelter from
their threatening situation and an advocate from the
Children’s Bureau is called.
Safe Places provide access to immediate help and
support services for all young people in crisis
through a network of business and community sites
sustained by qualified agencies and trained
volunteers.
In 2006, more than 9,000 youths received immediate
help through the more than 15,000 Safe Place sites
across the country. Another 10,000 young people
contacted a Safe Place site for help after learning
about the program through school and community
education.
Founded in 1983 in Louisville, Ky. and headquartered
there, National Safe Place provides training and
technical assistance for youth service agencies and
businesses interested in developing a Safe Place
program.
Children’s Bureau, Inc. is a private nonprofit human
services agency that provides help to individuals and
families. It reaches ten counties with programs aimed
at family preservation, prevention of child abuse and
neglect, effective parenting and adoption.
For more information about IndyGo and its service
area, visit
www.IndyGo.net or call
635.3344.
www.childrensbureau.org
www.nationalsafeplace.org
Tags: Children, Indianapolis, Mayor,
Bus