Dale
Dawes
Are there people in your past you never really got to know very well
but they still had a positive impact on your life?
Although she is now a teacher and a mother of two, Trina Wilcox still
remembers Dale Dawes, her school bus driver when she was a student at
Cedar Junior Secondary. Last week, all these years later, she nominated
him as a Neighbourhood Hero.
Trina is sure that when Dale first took over that route more than
twenty years ago, he got it because none of the more senior drivers
wanted it. The kids on the run, especially the boys, had built quite a
reputation for their rowdiness but that didn't seem to bother Dale.
"He had a constant smile on his face and he was always fair," Tina
recalls, "even when the kids were defiant and rude. He'd simply remain
calm and say, 'When you are ready to calm down, we'll talk'. But we
often spent a lot of time stopped on the side of the road waiting for
that to happen!"
It's interesting that Dale had such an impact on Trina because they
never really talked that much.
"It was just the special way he would greet us all as we got on or
off the bus," Trina recalls. "It always amazed me how he could remember
all of our names because he had over 150 kids a day to deal with and yet
he'd always have a special greeting and he'd remember so many little
things about our families and our school lives.
"He was the first school person I met at the beginning of my day and
the last to see me safely home at the end and he always made me feel
good."
Every Christmas Trina would bake Dale a tray of cookies and now, she
says every time she puts a batch of cookies in the oven, she thinks of
how lucky the students are who ride his bus.
"Even on my bad days," Trina smiled, "the kind all teenagers have
from time to time, as long as Dale was in the driver's seat when I got
on the bus, I knew I'd be fine."
It seems Dale's easy to get along with personality doesn't disappear
when he gets off the bus either. Both Dave Prevost, his supervisor, and
fellow driver, Joy Hunter, spoke of him as being the type of guy that's
a lot of fun to work with. "You can always count on him to liven the
place up," Prevost concluded.
Although he was pleased to be nominated, like most of our
Neighbourhood Heroes, Dale was reluctant to have this column written
about him. He definitely does not think of himself as any kind of
"hero". But, like all of the others I've written about over the past two
years, he's a role model from whom we can all learn - There's a lot of
power in a consistent smile-filled greeting for instance -- Also, by
telling his and other stories, my hope is that we motivate you to
notice, and acknowledge, the Neighbourhood Heroes in your life.
In the next week or so Trina will be dropping by the bus depot to see
Dale and give him his Neighbourhood Heroes certificate. I wouldn't be
surprised if she had a box of cookies for him too.
By the way, Trina's nomination was drawn from all of those sent in
over the past few months so she is the winner of our weekend for two at
Tauca Lea by the Sea in Ucluelet.
If you'd like to nominate someone as a Neighbourhood Hero, go to www.nhero.org or call 250-741-7499.