REEDLEY, Calif. — The first of four all-electric school buses from Type A bus manufacturer Trans Tech Bus is in service at Kings Canyon Unified School District (KCUSD).
The SSTe recently passed the California Highway Patrol's certification and was deemed legal to begin service in the state, and officials said it also passed the school district’s inspections.
The electric school bus, which was delivered last month, is expected to save Kings Canyon Unified School District over $10,000 a year in fuel and maintenance costs, officials said. The other three buses are on their way to the district.
The SSTe utilizes a Ford E-450 cutaway chassis equipped with a Motiv Power Systems electric powertrain.
“KCUSD has taken major strides to reduce diesel particulate emissions by as much as 85%,” said Jason Flores, transportation director. “Going electric with these new green school buses is just one more important step in KCUSD's ongoing portfolio of measures to protect our children, serve our community and be good stewards of our environment. We hope other school districts will follow our lead to protect children from diesel particulates, and protect themselves from rising diesel costs.”
Motiv’s electric Powertrain Control System is installed on the E-450 chassis and other chassis types as a ship-through modification similar to a compressed natural gas up-fit. This enables minimal changes between the fossil fuel and electric versions of the vehicles, according to the company.
“In this way, we are answering the call of the transportation industry to build reliable electric vehicles that fit seamlessly into the existing truck and bus manufacturing and service infrastructure,” said Jim Castelaz, founder and CEO of Motiv Power Systems. “We are absolutely thrilled to see this school bus transporting students without exposing them to diesel exhaust. I hope that by the time my daughter is old enough to go to school, clean, zero-emission school buses like this one will be the industry standard.”
The first SSTe buses are partially funded by the AB 118 Air Quality Improvement Program (AQIP) administered by the California Air Resources Board. Funding support for the electric school buses was provided through AQIP’s Advanced Technology Demonstration Project and the Hybrid and Zero-Emission Truck and Bus Voucher Incentive Project (HVIP). Voucher incentive funding is available through HVIP to any California school district for offsetting the cost of these zero-emission buses. Similar programs are in place in New York City and Chicago.
The Trans Tech/Motiv SSTe school bus is available with 80 or 100 miles of range and holds 25 students, or 18 students with a wheelchair lift and configurable track seating for up to three wheelchairs.
Trans Tech introduced the bus at the National Association for Pupil Transportation’s Summit in Grand Rapids, Mich., last year.
Trans Tech all-electric bus in service at California district
The SSTe is the first of four electric buses in service at Kings Canyon Unified School District, and officials say the bus is expected to save over $10,000 a year in fuel and maintenance costs.

The first of four all-electric SSTe school buses from Trans Tech Bus is in service at Kings Canyon Unified School District in Reedley, Calif. At left is former Director of Transportation John Clements, who helped the district secure the buses.
More Alternative Fuels
A Look at RIDE’s Push to Scale Electric School Buses
Let’s talk EV school bus demand, battery safety, V2G technology, and the future of electric student transportation at ACT Expo 2026 with leaders from RIDE.
Read More →Inside IC Bus’ Next-Gen Electric CE Series School Bus
In this video from ACT Expo, IC Bus EV sales director Alec Borror discusses next-generation electric school buses, driver feedback, and the future of bus electrification.
Read More →Can School Buses Power the Grid? Tellus Power Says Bet on V2G
In this ACT Expo video, Tellus Power’s Srikanth Kanaparthi discusses large-scale vehicle-to-grid charging, EV infrastructure growth, and why school buses are the ideal platform for fleet electrification.
Read More →Propane vs. EV School Buses: Blue Bird Execs Talk Alt-Fuel Progress
Check in with Blue Bird's alternative fuel managers as they discuss school bus options, infrastructure challenges, district fuel choice, EPA 2027 regulations, and the future of alt-fuel student transportation.
Read More →
Alt-Fuel Moves: Racking Up Miles & Scaling Up Fleets
Electric school buses are hitting the road in greater numbers as fleets expand, infrastructure catches up, and mileage accumulates.
Read More →
Virginia Clean Cities Celebrates 30 Years, Highlights Award Winners in School Bus Innovation
At its annual rally, the organization spotlighted propane and electric school bus advancements while recognizing leaders driving forward-looking student transportation.
Read More →
Alt-Fuel Moves: Funding & the Road to Electrification
From federal oversight fixes to state funding milestones and district deployments, the transition to cleaner school transportation continues to advance.
Read More →
Thomas Built Buses Adds Gasoline Engine Option to Saf-T-Liner C2 School Bus Lineup
The gasoline-powered bus features the Cummins B6.7 Octane engine and industry-first compression brake, joining the OEM's C2 powertrain lineup for 2026.
Read More →
The New Playbook for Safer, Smarter School Bus Maintenance
As school districts juggle aging buses, technician shortages and rising safety expectations, proactive fleet maintenance is becoming essential. This guide explores how telematics, predictive maintenance and real-time vehicle data can help transportation departments reduce breakdowns, extend vehicle life, improve compliance and keep students safer on the road.
Read More →
InCharge Energy Plugs Into Canada with New Key Partnerships
InCharge Energy has expanded into Canada through partnerships with RocketEV and Foreseeson, aiming to deliver end-to-end EV charging infrastructure and support for fleet and public-sector customers.
Read More →
