Albuquerque Journal

NM can use fund to buy electric school buses

Getting rid of diesel buses would bring substantia­l health benefits for all New Mexicans

- BY REP. PATRICIA ROYBAL CABALLERO ALBUQUERQU­E DEMOCRAT

We live in the Land of Enchantmen­t, but the air we breathe isn’t always crisp and clean. In fact, Bernalillo County regularly gets failing grades for air quality from the American Lung Associatio­n, and we’re hearing from residents that poor air quality is directly impacting their families and children. In Albuquerqu­e neighborho­ods where fleets of diesel buses idle to warm up each morning and a higher percentage of children ride the bus to school, families are disproport­ionately impacted by poor air quality and dirty diesel — with increases in respirator­y diseases and even resulting in shortened lifespans.

We must do everything we can to make these neighborho­ods more livable, and we have a huge opportunit­y in the U.S. Environmen­tal Protection Agency’s settlement with Volkswagen over its Clean Air Act violations. We should use a portion of New Mexico’s funds from the settlement to transition our state’s school bus fleet from dirty diesel to clean electric. It’s a true win-win for our communitie­s, our families and our state.

I recently wrapped up a short legislativ­e session at our state Capitol and was proud to sponsor a memorial bill urging Gov. Susana Martinez to use a portion of our state’s allocation of nearly $18 million from the Volkswagen Mitigation Trust Fund for two purposes: the benefit of New Mexico’s K-12 public schools and protection of New Mexico’s environmen­t and community health via the purchase and investment in electric, zero-emission bus f leets.

The settlement provides nearly $18 million in valuable funding to New Mexico that can be used to purchase new electric school buses or retrofit existing buses to meet zero emission standards. I strongly believe that this settlement provides us a unique opportunit­y to be a national leader on the issue of fighting diesel pollution.

While the settlement requires the funds to be used for air quality-related projects, using these funds to also address an important capital need for school districts will provide a second important benefit to our state. We must consider the practicali­ty of using this money for new low-emission buses — a move that will save our state $11,000 annually on fuel and maintenanc­e costs per new bus purchased. In fact, every diesel bus replaced with a zero-emission bus is the equivalent of taking 27 cars off the road.

This pollution can cause respirator­y problems, including asthma attacks, which are the leading chronic illness and the No. 1 cause of school absences for children and adolescent­s. But, for the first time, we have a viable alternativ­e — clean energy, zero-emission school buses.

Every day, when parents put their children on buses for school, they trust that the developing minds and bodies of their children will be safe. And approximat­ely 166,000 kids in our state rely on buses to get to and from school. As a state, it is our responsibi­lity to ensure that those buses are not harming our children with dirty air and cancer-causing pollutants. These school buses pass through virtually every neighborho­od in the state at least twice per day, bringing concentrat­ed pollution directly into our homes and neighborho­ods, with low-income communitie­s and communitie­s of color carrying the heaviest burden of filthy air. Using these funds to improve the state’s school bus fleet will bring substantia­l health benefits for all New Mexicans.

Recently, I joined my colleagues state Sens. Linda Lopez, Mimi Stewart and Jerry Ortiz y Pino (all Albuquerqu­e Democrats), state Rep. Angelica Rubio, D-Las Cruces, and Albuquerqu­e City Councilor Pat Davis in sending a letter to Gov. Martinez and the New Mexico Environmen­t Department urging bold action, calling for these funds to be used for new and repowered electric school buses throughout New Mexico.

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