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AQMD Awards $40 Million for Cleaner, Lower-Emission Trucks, School Buses

December 3, 2010

The South Coast Air Management District today awarded more than $40 million to help replace 146 diesel school buses across the Southland and about 400 older diesel trucks operating primarily at the ports and in other goods movement activities.   

With today’s awards, AQMD has now funded the replacement of more than 1,100 older diesel school buses and over 2,500 older diesel trucks with cleaner, lower-emission models. 

“Diesel soot remains a serious health threat and accelerating the transition to cleaner vehicle fleets is one important way we can help protect public health,” said Dennis Yates, vice chairman of AQMD’s Governing Board. “Today’s award helps get some of the dirtiest diesel trucks and school buses off Southland roadways.” 

Today’s action provides more than $21 million to 11 school districts across the Southland to replace a total of 128 pre-1994 and 18 pre-1987 diesel school buses with cleaner-burning compressed natural gas (CNG) and propane school buses. 

Following is a summary of school bus awards approved today:

School District

# of buses
(CNG unless
otherwise indicated)

Total Funding Award

Banning

1

$169,524

Bonita

1

$169,524

Chino Valley

7

$1,186,668

Desert Sands

8

$1,356,192

Garden Grove

13

$2,203,812

Hemet

2

$339,048

Los Angeles

70

$11,866,680

Los Angeles

18 (Propane)

$2,070,000

Orange

4

$678,096

Pupil Transportation

10

$1,695,240

Rialto

4

$678,096

Temecula

8

$1,356,192

The new lower-emission school buses are substantially cleaner than the older diesel buses they replace.  The new buses also emit no diesel soot, which is the source of about 84 percent of all air pollution cancer risk in the region.

Today’s action also provides more than $19 million to replace almost 400 older diesel trucks operating primarily at the ports of Los Angeles and Long Beach and in other goods movement related activities.  Heavy-duty trucks are one of the largest sources of smog-forming nitrogen oxides in Southern California.

Funding comes from voter-approved Proposition 1B which provides funds to replace older diesel trucks and school buses.  Additional funding for school bus replacements comes from the U.S. EPA and the state’s Carl Moyer Program. 

AQMD is the air pollution control agency for Orange County and major portions of Los Angeles, San Bernardino and Riverside counties.

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This page updated: December 03, 2010
URL: http://www.aqmd.gov/news1/2010/bs_120310.htm