Sun Sentinel Palm Beach Edition

State to get electric buses from VW settlement money

- By Jim Turner

TALLAHASSE­E — New public-transit and school buses that run on electricit­y and alternativ­e fuels would get much of Florida’s share of a federal payout from a Volkswagen emissions scandal, under a plan rolled out by the state.

The Florida Department of Environmen­tal Protection issued its plans for a $116.4 million initiative intended to voluntaril­y remove older buses from the road.

The funding would account for 70 percent of the money Florida is slated to receive from the 2017 settlement over allegation­s that Volkswagen violated emissions requiremen­ts.

Potential applicants have until Nov. 7 to express interest in the program, which will help the Department of Environmen­tal Protection determine “the scope of available funding and timing of projects,” the request said.

The initiative, in part, would cover up to 100 percent of the cost of new government-owned buses and privately owned buses under contract with public schools, transit and shuttle programs. Along with electricpo­wered vehicles, money could go to buses that run on fuels such as propane and compressed natural gas.

For buses used by other private entities, the state would cover up to 75 percent of the cost for new all-electric vehicles and 25 percent of the cost of new vehicles using alternativ­e fuels.

The state is also moving forward immediatel­y with $5 million in offering — on a firstcome, first-served basis — to pay for replacemen­t of 2009 and older diesel school buses with electric battery-powered school buses and associated charging infrastruc­ture.

A priority for that initial replacemen­t program would be designated “air quality priority areas,” which include Miami, Broward County, Palm Beach County, Tampa, St. Petersburg, Orlando, Jacksonvil­le and Pensacola.

The Florida Conservati­on Voters Education Fund called the request for informatio­n “a victory for climate action.”

“Every day, diesel school buses expose 2.7 million Florida students to toxins and known carcinogen­s,” Aliki Moncrief, the fund’s executive director, said.

Moncrief said her group has

spent two years pushing for the settlement dollars to go to “clean electric” school buses.

“The governor listened,” Moncrief said. “Today’s commitment to clean energy will help leave our children with a better world, both by cleaning their air and reducing carbon emissions that contribute to climate change.”

The bus money is part of the $166 million Florida received as its share of the $14.7 billion settlement between Volkswagen and the U.S. Department of Justice.

The federal government said the German automaker installed software in its 2.0-liter diesel engine vehicles that disabled emission controls under normal use. The emissions-control devices were alleged to turn on when being tested.

The result of the disabled emission controls was improved fuel mileage and driving performanc­e but the release of thousands of tons of nitrogen oxide emissions in excess of regulated limits.

In July, Gov. Ron DeSantis announced that $24.9 million of the settlement, or 15 percent, would go toward placing charging stations for electric vehicles at all Florida Turnpike “Today’s commitment to clean energy will help leave our children with a better world, both by cleaning their air and reducing carbon emissions that contribute to climate change.”

Aliki Moncrief, Florida Conservati­on Voters Education Fund executive director service plazas by the end of the year, with similar infrastruc­ture along other major highways.

Another 15 percent would be directed to a state grant program of the U.S. Environmen­tal Protection Agency’s Diesel Emissions Reduction Act, which is designed to reduce diesel emissions from engines that weren’t made to meet more stringent post-2006 emission standards.

 ?? MARKUS SCHREIBER/AP ?? The $15 billion settlement of most claims against Volkswagen was approved by a federal judge in 2016.
MARKUS SCHREIBER/AP The $15 billion settlement of most claims against Volkswagen was approved by a federal judge in 2016.

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