Reading riders: Moses Lake school bus driver collects books for kids
JOEL MARTIN | Hagadone News Network | UPDATED 1 year, 12 months AGO
Joel Martin has been with the Columbia Basin Herald for more than 25 years in a variety of roles and is the most-tenured employee in the building. Martin is a married father of eight and enjoys spending time with his children and his wife, Christina. He is passionate about the paper’s mission of informing the people of the Columbia Basin because he knows it is important to record the history of the communities the publication serves. | May 10, 2024 1:30 AM
MOSES LAKE — A Moses Lake school bus driver has found a way to encourage students to love the written word. Tony Lavalle, known to his young passengers as Mr. Tony, has begun distributing books to the students who ride his bus to and from Groff Elementary School.
“This year, I started Read a Book Monday,” Lavalle said. “The student comes on board and they read a book, and that usually keeps them quiet, and it keeps them in their seat. This is a really effective tool for me to help manage the kids to ride safe and ride respectfully.”
The other thing reading a book does is earn the student what’s called “Gator Tracks,” points students can redeem at the student store.
“I kind of noticed as the year has gone on, (students would say) ‘They don't have any more books, I gotta wait. My library day’s not till Thursday,'” Lavalle said.
Last year, Lavalle started looking around for books to give away, with the idea of giving one to each student at the end of the year. He had no children of his own, he said, so he didn’t have children’s books lying around. However, found some at garage sales and thrift stores, and a couple of boxes were donated to him.
“I made up little boxes with (books for) young kids, middle-grade readers and more advanced readers,” he said. “In the morning, I just left a couple of boxes scattered throughout my bus and the kids were saying, ‘Oh my gosh, I've wanted to read this one,’ and they're trading back and forth.”
Lavalle isn’t much of a social media user, but he posted a request on Craigslist and his sister Amy Ward put out a request on Facebook as well, as well as getting the word out to the Lioness Club and her church.
“So far, it's been pretty successful,” Ward said. “Lots of the neighborhood people seem to really be happy to donate their kids’ books.”
“(I made the Craigslist ad) just on the off chance that it might spur somebody that's doing their spring cleaning,” Lavalle said. “Or maybe the books that didn't sell at a garage sale, they could donate them to a good cause. And then they'll get read again to kids during summer.”
Lavalle is still looking for books to give out, he said, and if he gets more than his passengers can read, he’ll share with other bus drivers.
His boss, MLSD Transportation Director Lorri Smith, said handing out books is a great way to keep students behaving.
“We have to find other ways to reward students because Washington state law does not allow school bus drivers to hand food out to students,” she said. “So the days of giving them some candy or something like that are over.”
Lavalle said some students on his bus have surprised him with their reading habits.
“I got a lot of (books for) the younger readers level, like ‘Dick and Jane,’ ‘See Spot Run,” he said. “But I've got a couple of fifth-graders that they've got on my bus with Harry Potter, ‘The Hobbit,’ ‘The Hunger Games,’ (books) like those. They're super advanced readers, but I thought those books were well beyond a fifth-grade reading level. So books … like Harry Potter, the Chronicles of Narnia – I'd like a few of those.”
District officials applaud Lavalle's efforts to keep students reading.
“I'm thrilled that this is something that Tony has come up with ... so that other kids can continue to get books … to look at when they start their summer,” Smith said.
Joel Martin may be reached at [email protected]. He is an avid reader and father himself.
Want to contribute?
Donations can be brought to the MLSD Transportation Department at 940 E Yonezawa Blvd. Frederick’s Jewelry, at 208 W. Third Ave. downtown, will also accept donations Saturdays when the MLSD is closed.
ARTICLES BY JOEL MARTIN
Mail carriers to collect food Saturday
MOSES LAKE — Mail carriers in Moses Lake will collect food for the Moses Lake Food Bank Saturday, part of the annual Stamp Out Hunger Food Drive. “(We’re asking) for a small donation of non-perishable food by your mailbox,” said carrier Michelle Schmidt, who’s coordinating the drive this year for Moses Lake. “And then on Saturday when we’re delivering, we’ll be picking up the food as we go along our route.” Schmidt suggested marking the food donation clearly, so carriers don’t pick up someone’s delivery order from a store. Anyone wanting more information can ask their mail carrier. The drive, put on by the National Association of Letter Carriers the second Saturday in May, has been going on since 1993, according to the NALC’s website.
Palos Verdes moves into Moses Lake
Mae Valley homes a first for the Othello-based builder
MOSES LAKE — One of Othello’s biggest developers just started its first new housing development in Moses Lake. “We’ve been building in Othello for the past 12, 13 years, and then moved to the Quincy area seven, eight years (ago),” said Angel Garza, owner of Othello-based Palos Verdes. “We’ve always had our eye on Moses Lake.” Garza was there Wednesday to cut the ribbon at Sandhill Place, the new Palos Verdes development in Mae Valley. Palos Verdes has 31 lots under development, Garza said, with right of first refusal on another 50 or so, including some that face the Moses Lake Golf Club. The homes at Sandhill Estates are a little different from Palos Verdes’ previous floor plans, Garza said, something he had some reservations about at first.
BASIN EVENTS: May 8-16
COLUMBIA BASIN — The weather is just about perfect and there are things going on all over the Basin. Here are some options to check out. May 8-10 ‘Dear Evan Hansen’ Basin Community Theatre presents the Tony Award-winning musical. 7:10 p.m. Thursday-Saturday, 1:10 p.m. Saturday and Sunday at the Moses Lake High School Theater, 803 E. Sharon Ave. Tickets and info: basincommunitytheatre.com.