Toronto Star

Crisis spurs rethink of traditiona­l school bus

Americans transformi­ng yellow buses into socially distanced home on wheels

- DALVIN BROWN

The coronaviru­s pandemic pushed Sparrow Kettner and her husband, Keith Smith, to rethink their careers and their home.

The couple are musicians who rent a mid-size house in Asheville, North Carolina. But with concert venues closed and large gatherings limited for now, they had time to plot their next move.

“Before all this, we stayed in Airbnbs and hotels when we were on the road,” Kettner says. “We needed a way to still travel and play at outdoor, socially distanced concerts. But we also needed to be more self-contained.”

So in April, they traded in their band’s tour van for an old, gutted school bus and spent the next several weeks converting it into a move-in-ready home on wheels with a kitchen, modular seating, chevron wood panelling and a bathroom.

The couple aren’t the only ones jumping on the bus. Sales of the used, bright yellow vehicles, called “skoolies” by their owners, have risen in some markets during the recession as more Americans shift toward a non-traditiona­l, more affordable and socially distanced way to live. People such as Kettner and her husband transform them into one-of-a-kind homes.

“Bus and RV conversion­s have been around for decades, but it has increased due to the quarantine and social distancing,” says Mike Curtis, general manager at National Bus Sales Inc., an Oklahoma-based, coast-tocoast dealer of shuttles, vans and school buses.

The trend is offering relief for bus sellers, who are struggling with lower sales overall as COVID-19 shuts schools and limits tourism. New York-based Used Bus World saw bus sales to individual­s climb sixfold since March. Northwest Bus Sales Inc. in Washington state said growing purchases of used school buses are keeping the lights on during the coronaviru­s crisis. Tesco Bus, a shuttle van service based in Ohio, has also seen a sharp rise in interest.

“People are looking for cheap shuttles that then they can put a little bit of time, effort and sweat equity into,” says Noel Graham, vice-president at Tesco Bus. “They’re turning them into campers.”

People fix up buses partially because trailers are more expensive to buy and have to be hauled by another vehicle. The buses are also cheaper than recreation­al vehicles.

Prices for used school buses usually start around $3,500, Curtis says, and costs vary depending on size, model year and mileage. The conversion process can be done for under $10,000, enthusiast­s say.

The average cost of a preowned recreation­al vehicle on RVTrader is $47,500. Used travel trailers without major damage start around $3,500, plus the cost of a tow vehicle.

Joseph Teceno has spent most of the pandemic renovating a 22-foot, 20-year-old skoolie for himself and his wife.

The Michigan-based pastor found the $3,750 school bus on Facebook Marketplac­e, drove to Georgia to pick it up and spent $11,000 converting it. He finished the project in July and wants to live in Florida. “We were kind of going through a hard time and took a leap of faith,” Teceno says. “We saved some money, started looking into it and now we’re ready to hit the road.”

Buyers often find retired school buses at auctions soon after the vehicles are taken out of commission by school districts, experts say. Schools usually let go of them after about 20 years of service, depending on state guidelines.

Before retirement, school buses are the most regulated vehicles on the road, built sturdily and designed to roll over on impact rather than to cave in, according to the National Highway Traffic Safety Associatio­n.

In their afterlife, the buses can be reclassifi­ed and registered as a motor home. Usually, a regular driver’s license is enough to operate them, but that can vary depending on state guidelines, according to Josh Davey who runs Davey Coach Sales, a specialty bus business.

There are downsides to purchasing any used vehicle, and those challenges are compounded when transformi­ng a school bus into a steel-shelled cabin fit for a full-time family. There’s room for error when installing insulation, appliances and electrical work. Bathrooms are particular­ly cumbersome.

Starla Sullivan and her husband, Brian, had toilet issues for a year after buying a $1,000 composting toilet. The flusher attracted mites and occasional­ly leaked inside their home. The couple built their own toilet instead, Starla says.

People sometimes abandon the project midway through and try to sell partially converted school buses online to cut their losses.

But with enough time, patience and basic building skills, old school buses are pretty simple to enhance with daily comforts, enthusiast­s say.

Gabriel and Deborah Mayes, and their four kids, downsized from a 5,000 square foot house in the Chicago-area to a 250square-foot, Scandinavi­anstyle bus. The parents hired a team to do all the internal building work, while the couple did all the painting and decorating, Gabriel says. The entire project cost just over $30,000 to complete. “At first, I didn’t know if we could make it work,” Gabriel says. “But we did.”

Curtis from National Bus Sales says clients are also converting buses to travel more.

“A lot of people initially bought into the dream of a large house, a big family and a green yard. Then, life happens,” says Flake, who runs the converting business. “There’s a lot of people looking for the slice of happiness that they gave up trying to follow the status quo.”

 ?? BARRY GRAY THE HAMILTON SPECTATOR FILE PHOTO ?? Sales of the used, bright yellow vehicles, called “skoolies” by their owners, have risen in some markets during the recession as more Americans shift toward a non-traditiona­l way to live.
BARRY GRAY THE HAMILTON SPECTATOR FILE PHOTO Sales of the used, bright yellow vehicles, called “skoolies” by their owners, have risen in some markets during the recession as more Americans shift toward a non-traditiona­l way to live.

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