KC Public Schools Purchase 47 Thomas CNG Buses

Dec. 21, 2010
The Kansas City Kansas Public School District has purchased 47 Thomas Built HDX rear engine buses, powered by compressed natural gas

The Kansas City Kansas Public School District has purchased 47 Thomas Built HDX rear engine buses, powered by compressed natural gas (CNG).

Acquisition of the buses, infrastructure and equipment was made possible by a $4 million grant from the U.S. Department of Energy (award DE-EE0002538) distributed through the Kansas City Regional Clean Cities Coalition and matching funds from Kansas City Kansas Public Schools.

Ken Hedgecock, vice president of sales, marketing and service for Thomas Built Buses said, "Many forward-thinking customers are taking advantage of opportunities to build cleaner, greener fleets, and to address their long-term concerns about the price of diesel fuel. There’s about a $1 a gallon advantage in CNG over diesel, and that really adds up when you’re running a fleet of school buses. In addition, low finance rates and lower maintenance costs can sweeten the deal, generating substantial savings."

The most recent order for Thomas Built CNG buses were purchased through Midwest Bus Sales, the Thomas Built dealer for Kansas, Oklahoma, western Missouri and Illinois.

The school district worked closely with Scott Kincaid, Midwest Bus Sales lease manager. Kincaid said:"Thomas responded to the school district’s request for bids with information on both hybrids and CNG buses. The school district chose CNG, in part because they liked the idea of using domestically-sourced CNG, rather than imported diesel fuel."

Midwest delivered one pilot model September 1, 2010. The rest of the buses will be delivered before the end of the year, and they’ll be put into service when the infrastructure is completed in early 2011.

Infrastructure, also part of the grant, is comprised of 35 time-fill dispensers, with dual hoses allowing each station to fuel two buses at a time. A time-fill arrangement allows buses to fill up overnight without any personnel being present, saving staff time and personnel cost.