
Report: Electric School Buses Freezing Students in New York
A statewide mandate requiring all school buses to be electric by 2035 has resulted in a chilly preview in one New York school district of whatâs to come: kids freezing on their rides to and from school. Islam Dogru/Anadolu via Getty Parents in the Lake Shore Central School District in Erie County are speaking out, claiming some bus drivers are turning the heat down - or off completely - in order to conserve battery life on electric buses, the Buffalo news outlet WIVB is reporting. The news station reports it is receiving calls from concerned parents who say their kids are freezing cold when they come home. The kids are so cold parents are giving them hand warmers. âThe heaters on the bus run off the same electricity as the bus itself,â Scott Ziobro, a parent and former school board candidate told the outlet. âThey were told that it drains the battery capacity of the bus itself.â Winter temperatures in the Buffalo area are typically in the 20s and 30s, according to Buffalo.org. The school district covers parts of several towns along Lake Erie south of Buffalo. The state of New York has mandated that all school bus purchases must be electric by 2027 and is requiring an all-electric bus fleet statewide by 2035. The district currently operates a mix of electric buses and buses powered by petroleum products, with 23 of them electric, four using diesel, and 24 gasoline powered, according to superintendent Phil Johnson. According to WIVBâs report: The district was able to purchase 20 new electric school buses, which they cut the ribbon on over the summer using a $7.9 million federal grant from the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency. All of the buses operate in compliance with New York State Department of Transportation regulations, including required interior temperature standards, the district said. However, parents who complained to the station said there have also been reports of the electric buses failing. âThe bus broke down on route,â said Chris Lampman, whose son allegedly had to stand outside in the freezing cold as a result. âThey deployed a substitute bus, and the bus was more than 30 minutes late. My son stood outside for over 35 minutes waiting for a bus that wasnât coming.â Lynn Urbino was appalled when her grandson she helps raise told her why his bus was cold. âMy grandson came home from school last week when it was 23 degrees,â Urbino told the news outlet. âHe said they didnât have heat. He came in cold, and I told him, I said, âIsnât the bus warm?â And he said, âNo, they canât put the heat on because it drains the battery.ââ The district said it is aware of questions regarding heating on electric buses during cold winter conditions. The school district released a statement purporting to address the problem: District procedures are that heat remains on for the full duration of student transportation. All routes are planned so that the electric bus battery capacity is more...
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