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Home Opinion

Why Uganda’s School Buses Should Be Painted Yellow, and Why the Policy Matters

Insight Post Uganda by Insight Post Uganda
July 18, 2026
in Opinion
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Why Uganda’s School Buses Should Be Painted Yellow, and Why the Policy Matters

Yellow Buses.

The tragic road crashes that have claimed the lives of schoolchildren and left others injured in Uganda have repeatedly exposed the dangers surrounding learner transportation.

Every accident involving a school bus leaves families devastated and raises difficult questions about whether enough is being done to protect children on the country’s roads.

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It is against this backdrop that the Ministry of Education and Sports directed schools to paint all vehicles used for transporting learners yellow.

While some school owners have viewed the requirement as an added cost, the policy is rooted in decades of scientific research and international road safety practice. It is far more than a cosmetic change. It is a deliberate measure aimed at saving lives.

Road safety experts have long agreed that yellow is among the most visible colours to the human eye. Unlike darker colours such as blue, green or black, yellow stands out in almost every environment.

Whether it is early morning when children are heading to school, late evening when they are returning home, or during rainy or foggy weather, a yellow vehicle can be spotted from a much greater distance than many other colours.

Scientists have also found that the human eye detects yellow faster than most other colours, especially through peripheral vision. This means motorists approaching from different directions are more likely to notice a yellow school bus earlier and react in time by slowing down or changing course.

For a vehicle carrying dozens of children, those extra seconds can make the difference between a near miss and a fatal collision.

The use of yellow school buses did not happen by chance.

The practice dates back to 1939 in the United States, when education professor Dr. Frank W. Cyr, widely recognised as the “Father of the Yellow School Bus,” convened a national conference involving educators, transport officials, engineers and paint manufacturers.

At the conference, experts studied various paint colours to determine which one offered the greatest visibility under different weather and lighting conditions.

They eventually agreed on a colour known as National School Bus Glossy Yellow, originally called National School Bus Chrome.

The colour was selected because it remained highly visible during dawn, dusk, rain, snow and fog while also providing excellent contrast for black lettering used to display school names and vehicle identification numbers.

The conference also established national standards for school buses, helping create a uniform appearance that drivers could instantly recognise.

More than eight decades later, the yellow school bus remains one of the world’s most recognised road safety symbols.

Lessons from Other Countries

Many countries have adopted yellow school buses because of their proven safety advantages.

In the United States, Canada and several other nations, the yellow school bus has become a standard part of road safety regulations.

Motorists are trained to recognise yellow school buses and, in many jurisdictions, are legally required to stop when children are boarding or disembarking.

Although Uganda’s traffic laws differ, making school transport vehicles easily identifiable remains an important safety measure.

As Uganda continues improving road safety, adopting internationally recognised practices can strengthen efforts to protect learners.

School transport in Uganda has expanded rapidly over the last two decades as urbanisation and increasing school enrolment have led more parents to rely on buses and vans.

Many learners travel long distances each day on busy highways shared with trucks, taxis, motorcycles and private vehicles.

Unfortunately, Uganda continues to record thousands of road crashes every year, with speeding, reckless overtaking, driver fatigue, poor vehicle maintenance and human error remaining among the leading causes.

When school buses become involved in accidents, the consequences are often devastating because they usually carry many children at once.

Making these vehicles more visible cannot prevent every crash, but it significantly reduces one of the avoidable risk factors, namely poor visibility.

Visibility Is Only One Part of Safety

Painting school buses yellow should never be viewed as a complete solution.

Colour alone cannot compensate for poor mechanical condition, reckless driving or weak enforcement of traffic regulations.

A truly safe school transport system requires several complementary measures, including regular mechanical inspections of school buses, professional training and certification of school bus drivers, strict enforcement of speed limits, installation of seat belts where applicable, daily vehicle safety checks before transporting learners, proper loading and unloading procedures, regular monitoring by school administrators and traffic police, as well as clear emergency response plans for schools.

Without these measures, a yellow bus can still become involved in a preventable crash.

Some schools, particularly smaller private institutions, may struggle to repaint their buses because of financial constraints.

Others may argue that existing school branding or corporate colours will be affected.

However, compared to the cost of a serious road crash, repainting a vehicle represents a relatively small investment.

The long-term benefit of improved visibility outweighs the initial expense.

Governments in several countries have long treated school transport safety as a public responsibility rather than an optional branding exercise.

Public Awareness Is Equally Important

The success of the yellow bus policy also depends on public understanding.

Drivers should be educated on why yellow school buses deserve extra caution.

Parents should appreciate that the policy is intended to protect their children rather than impose unnecessary costs on schools.

Road safety campaigns can reinforce the message by encouraging motorists to reduce speed whenever they encounter school transport vehicles, particularly near schools, pedestrian crossings and residential areas.

Conclusion

The Ministry of Education’s directive to paint all school transport vehicles yellow is a practical, evidence-based intervention that aligns Uganda with internationally recognised road safety standards.

The science behind the colour is well established. Yellow improves visibility, attracts attention faster than most other colours and encourages caution among other road users.

However, the policy should not become another regulation that exists only on paper.

Authorities must ensure that schools fully comply, while traffic police and education inspectors regularly monitor implementation. More importantly, the yellow paint should form part of a broader national school transport safety strategy.

The government should also work with the Ministry of Works and Transport, the Uganda Police Force and local governments to introduce regular inspections for school buses, mandatory defensive driving training for drivers, stronger enforcement against speeding and stricter penalties for schools operating unroadworthy vehicles.

Every road user also has a responsibility. Seeing a yellow school bus should immediately remind motorists that children are nearby and that extra caution is required.

Ultimately, the objective is not to make school buses look attractive. It is to make them impossible to ignore.

If a brighter colour helps drivers notice children sooner, slows traffic, prevents even a single collision or saves one child’s life, then painting school buses yellow becomes far more than a regulatory requirement. It becomes one of the simplest and most effective investments Uganda can make in protecting its future generation.

The writer, Ivan Kimbowa, is a senior journalist and public affairs analyst. Contact: +256 701 584 195 or ivankimbowa7@gmail.com.

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Why Uganda’s School Buses Should Be Painted Yellow, and Why the Policy Matters

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