
Electric buses are proving unreliable this winter for Vermont’s Green Mountain Transit, as it needs to be over 41 degrees for the buses to charge, but due to a battery recall, the buses are a fire hazard and can’t be charged in a garage. [some emphasis, links added]
Spokesman for energy workers advocacy group Power the Future, Larry Behrens, told The Center Square: “Taxpayers were sold an $8 million ‘solution’ that can’t operate in cold weather when the home for these buses is in New England.”
“We’re beyond the point where this looks like incompetence and starts to smell like fraud,” Behrens said.
“When government rushes money out the door to satisfy green mandates, basic questions about performance, safety, and value for taxpayers are always pushed aside,” Behrens said. “Americans deserve to know who approved this purchase and why the red flags were ignored.”
General manager at Green Mountain Transit (GMT), Clayton Clark, told The Center Square that “the federal government provides public transit agencies with new buses through a competitive grant application process, and success is not a given.”
“From 2020-2024, the [Federal Transit Administration’s] priority for grants had been low or no emission vehicles, with grant requests for diesel buses often not awarded,” Clark said.
“This was part of a concerted effort of the previous administration to accelerate public transit’s migration to replace diesel buses,” Clark said.
“To be competitive for a grant, GMT…saw electric battery buses as the pathway to get the most new buses,” Clark said. “Green Mountain Transit’s priority is new buses, regardless of the type.”
Clark informed The Center Square that GMT’s “electric battery buses are 90% paid for by federal and Volkswagen settlement funds.”
GMT received five New Flyer SE40 city buses in spring 2025, these buses being a part of “a three-year grant cycle for 19 total electric battery buses,” Clark said.
“In September 2025, we ordered seven additional buses with a 2027 delivery date (but will be delivered with different batteries [than the recalled ones]), and seven more slated for delivery in 2028,” Clark said. “This is the primary source of new buses for the next three years, as we have only three diesel buses anticipated.”
“Canceling the federal grant for electric bus purchases would result in us losing the grant funds,” Clark said. “It would not give us an opportunity to use the funds differently.”
“We will work with FTA to see if the grant can be modified for year three since those buses haven’t yet been ordered,” Clark said.
Clark also explained that the five electric buses were “operating well” until November 2025, when the batteries “were recalled for fire hazard.”

The recall prompted a software update from New Flyer to “decrease the likelihood for fire” that “included only allowing the bus to charge to 75% and to not allow charging when the battery is below 41 degrees,” Clark explained.
“Previously, we could charge in any temperature to 100%,” Clark said.
As GMT’s bus garage “does not have suitable fire-mitigation equipment to store or charge an electric bus indoors at this time,” the transportation system is unable to use its electric buses when temperatures hit below 41. …
Policy analyst at the Institute for Energy Research, William Rampe, told The Center Square that:
“The failure of Green Mountain Transit’s EV buses further highlights the problems with investing in electric vehicle fleets without considering the conditions and infrastructure they need to operate.”
“In Vermont’s case, the cold temperatures of the winter months, alongside the risk of EV batteries catching on fire, make their new bus fleet unusable, putting the level of service GMT provides at risk,” Rampe said.
“This failure adds costs to taxpayers, either by requiring GMT to invest in adequate replacements or by forcing its riders to find alternate means of transportation, which could be especially difficult for low-income riders,” Rampe said.
Rampe told The Center Square that he and those at the Institute for Energy Research “do not believe EVs are reliable in most situations, as the failure of these buses shows.”
Top: Electric buses sit unused at a Green Mountain Transit lot in Vermont. WCAX-TV screencap.
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