The superintendent of a Louisville, Kentucky-area school district came to a heated exchange with a local reporter over not scheduling media availability in the wake of what he called a “transportation disaster,” that kept some students from reaching their home until late at night and ultimately canceled classes.

In a video published by the Louisville Courier Journal, a part of the USA Today network, Jefferson County Public School Superintendent Marty Pollio told a reporter that media availability was not scheduled for Thursday as he drove his daughter to college.

“What are you asking me, specifically?” Pollio said. “If you are asking me if I was a dad yesterday – yes, I was a dad yesterday.”

Pollio was visibly offended by a reporter’s questioning regarding his lack of media availability. The reporter pressed Pollio for an explanation for his public absence in the immediate aftermath of making the decision to cancel classes after bus delays caused students to get home hours after their school’s dismissal – some just before 10 p.m.

“That is really an unbelievable question from you,” Pollio continued. “I drove my daughter to college while I worked the entire time. If there is an issue with that – me not being able to speak to you – because I was being a dad, then that’s what I was being. I was being a dad.”

From Louisville:Behind the superintendent’s heated exchange over media availability amid busing disaster

Bussing chaos keeps kids late

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