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How he rolls: Bentworth superintendent takes wheel in school bus demolition derby

By Karen Mansfield 4 min read
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Bentworth School District Superintendent Scott Martin will drive this Bentworth school bus in the Washington County Agricultural Fair school bus demolition derby.
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Bentworth School District Superintendent Scott Martin will drive this Bentworth school bus in the Washington County Agricultural Fair school bus demolition derby.
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This demolition derby school bus was decorated by Bentworth High School Band members.
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Bentworth High School band members decorated the Pixar-themed school bus that their superintendent, Scott Martin, will drive in the Washington County Agricultural Fair school bus demolition derby.
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Bentworth High School Band members, who decorated a school bus for the Washington County Agricultural FairĢƵ annual school bus demolition derby, will perform before the derby. The bus will be driven by Bentworth School District Superintendent Scott Martin.
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Bentworth School District Superintendent Scott Martin will wear a school bus-themed shirt when he participates in the Washington County Agricultural Fair school bus demolition derby on Wednesday.
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Bentworth School District Superintendent Scott Martin will wear a school bus-themed shirt when he participates in the Washington County Agricultural Fair school bus demolition derby on Wednesday.

Thirteen buses are scheduled to face off at the Washington County Agricultural FairĢƵ annual school bus demolition derby – one of the fairĢƵ most popular events – at 8 p.m. Wednesday.

Behind the steering wheel of the Bentworth School District bus, ready to crash into the other buses and hoping to emerge as the winner, will be Bentworth Superintendent Scott Martin.

Wait … the districtĢƵ top administrator wants to drive in the demolition derby?

“I thought it was something that the community could get behind and that the kids could get behind,” said Martin.

Mission accomplished, said Dave Schreiber, Bentworth Middle School principal and district transportation coordinator.

“Our communityĢƵ really excited about this, the kids are so enthusiastic,” said Schreiber. “Among his peers and colleagues, we’re thinking, boy, oh, boy, I wonder if heĢƵ watching old videos of Evel Knievel to get ready for this. I don’t know who, at age 56, wants to get in a school bus and get beat up, but Scott has a remarkable desire to do whatever he can to create a positive culture in our district, and this has ignited a lot of excitement as we start the new school year.”

ItĢƵ also a chance for Martin to fulfill a long-time goal to participate in a demolition derby.

When he was a senior in high school, Martin bought a used Oldsmobile Delta 88 for $50 and worked on it, with the intention of driving the car in the Harrison (Ohio) County Fair demolition derby. But Martin, who had been active in the 4-H and served as Harrison County Fair King, had enlisted in the U.S. Army earlier that year, and two weeks after he graduated from high school he left for basic training.

“So I didn’t get to drive it,” said Martin, who served in the U.S. Army National Guard for 12 years.

To prepare for the event – metal crunching against metal under the bright lights – Martin has been getting advice from BentworthĢƵ mechanics and has spent some time in the bus garage working on accelerating, backing up and stopping.

“I drove larger-sized vehicles in the military, but buses are a little different. I’ve been reading online whatĢƵ the best strategy, but there isn’t a lot out there,” said Martin.

For the competition, Martin will don a Hawaiian shirt decorated with school buses and emblazoned with “This is how I roll” on the back. He also plans to wear a helmet, boots, knee pads and safety glasses: HeĢƵ ready to take some hits, but plans to plow into some buses, too.

“I’m just going to do my best and see how it goes. ThereĢƵ a bet that I won’t be here on Thursday because I’ll be too sore to show up, but even if I’m on deathĢƵ doorstep I will make it in,” said Martin, laughing.

Washington County high school bands – who decorated the Pixar-themed buses last week – will perform at 6 p.m., and a large contingent of Bentworth students and parents will cheer Martin on as he competes on the dirt battleground.

“If he wins, heĢƵ a hero; if he doesn’t, heĢƵ still a hero,” said Schreiber. “I commend him for doing it.”

Martin, a cancer survivor who was diagnosed 3½ years ago with head, neck and throat cancer, said the school districtĢƵ motto is “purpose, passion, pride,” and heĢƵ hoping his stint as a demolition driver motivates students.

“My purpose is to get kids excited and motivated. We always tell them to find their purpose, pursue it with passion, and be proud about it. I want them to know that if you have a purpose and a passion, you can accomplish anything,” said Martin. “I’m just going to do my best and see how it goes.”

And, sometimes itĢƵ just fun to wreck stuff.

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