Traffic & Transit

Scabies In Four South Bay Bus Drivers, VTA Confirmed

The transit agency removed 12 buses from operation for cleaning up after the contagious burrowing parasite reported in the driver's seat.

The first report of scabies was reported on April 6.
The first report of scabies was reported on April 6. (Valley Transportation Authority)

SAN JOSE, CA -- Four Santa Clara Valley Transportation Authority drivers have been confirmed to have had scabies, a skin rash caused by a tiny burrowing parasite.

The first driver reported the rash on April 6, and VTA has since confirmed three other reports, according to spokeswoman Brandi Childress. The transit agency removed 12 buses from operation for cleaning.

Scabies spreads quickly in crowded conditions, according to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Direct, prolonged skin-to-skin contact can spread the bug. VTA said no riders have reported scabies, and their current priority is cleaning the affected buses. All four operators said they contracted scabies after being in the driver's seat, not the passenger area.

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"This skin irritation is unlikely to be transmitted by merely sitting on a bus or being near a person with it," VTA officials said in a statement.

Buses from lines 22, 522, 55 and 88 will be vacuumed, steam-cleaned and wiped down with diluted bleach. VTA said chemical treatment is not necessary in this case, but they've hired an exterminator to oversee cleaning.

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"This is an added measure of precaution to make sure that our employees and our public have no reason to worry," VTA officials said. Public areas at the agency's North Division in Mountain View will receive extra cleaning, as well as 130 buses at the location.

The agency doesn't yet know the origin of the scabies. Service will not be impacted by the cleaning.

--Bay City News

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