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2 GA cities getting millions in federal funds for electric buses for zero emission goal

More money for electric buses is heading to two Georgia cities.
More money for electric buses is heading to two Georgia cities. mrodriguez@charlotteobserver.com

Bus systems in two Georgia cities will receive nearly $20 million in federal funds to replace older buses with electric models.

Augusta Transit will get almost $12.1 million for quieter, safer, and more reliable electric buses. The agency also will receive funding to buy a bus simulator to use in workforce training.

The Chatham Area Transit Authority in Savannah will get more than $7.8 million to replace old diesel buses with electric buses, furthering the agency’s transition to zero-emission transit vehicles.

“This is about improving our transit services for all riders and converting fleets of diesel-powered buses into clean energy vehicles for the future,” said U.S. Sen. Raphael Warnock, D-Ga., who made the announcement of the funding Tuesday in conjunction with Sen. Jon Ossoff, D-Ga. “This is a ride to the future.”

The money comes from the bipartisan infrastructure spending bill Congress passed in 2021.

The funding announced Tuesday is in addition to nearly $60 million in federal funding seven Georgia school districts received in January for new electric and low-emission buses.

Besides the money going to Augusta and Savannah, MARTA will get more than $25 million to build a transit hub in South DeKalb County for both bus and rail connections.

This story was originally published July 10, 2024 at 10:16 AM with the headline "2 GA cities getting millions in federal funds for electric buses for zero emission goal."

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