Twin Rivers USD and American River College will soon offer an electric school bus maintenance class. Shown here is a clean diesel and CNG training at Highlands High School last year.

Twin Rivers USD and American River College will soon offer an electric school bus maintenance class. Shown here is a clean diesel and CNG training at Highlands High School last year. 

Operating electric school buses may be a boon for the environment and offer savings on fuel and maintenance, but as a shortage of technicians grows and those currently in the workforce retire, who is going to maintain them?

TechForce Foundation, a nonprofit that provides students with educational resources to become automotive technicians, has found that the transportation technician shortage is growing. The nonprofit’s latest update points to increasing demand for professional technicians and a declining supply of new technicians entering the industry.

Moreover, a lack of familiarity with the technology involved in electric school buses may cause the shortage to grow even more, says Tim Shannon, director of transportation for Twin Rivers Unified School District (USD) in McClellan Park, California.

In response, he is working with a local college, municipal agencies, a dealership, and an electric school bus manufacturer to organize training for what will become an electric school bus repair program that high school students at his district can take for college credit.

Program Goal

Shannon says that he was originally inspired to create the training program after his district received a California Air Resources Board (CARB) grant for its 16 electric school buses in 2017. He and Craig Weckman, department chair of collision technology and diesel technology at American River College, discussed how to deal with a lack of technicians well-versed in electric vehicle maintenance coupled with an increase in related job opportunities that looms on the horizon.

“We need to drive that portion of the industry along with the acquisition of electric school buses,” Shannon says. “Since there are very few people who can work on them, as they start [retiring] and we get more [electric buses], we are going to need qualified technicians.”

Shannon and Weckman have already helped develop a couple of diesel and alternative-fuel technician classes at two of the district’s high schools. Highlands High School has offered clean diesel and compressed natural gas (CNG) training since last year. Additionally, there are three class periods of diesel courses (Brakes and Electrical) being taught there this semester. Meanwhile, at Rio Linda High School, two class periods of diesel courses (Electrical and Hydraulics) are being offered.

Student enthusiasm is high; the classes are full, Shannon says. The Highlands High School class, which the district started offering last year, consists of 40 students, and the Rio Linda High School class has 30 students enrolled.

“There’s quite a bit of interest,” Shannon says. “It’s not a fully electric program yet, [but] that is the eventual goal.”

To achieve that goal, Shannon and Weckman are teaming up on the creation of a dual-enrollment class for college credit with an electric component with the district and American River College.

An electric bus maintenance train-the-trainer class for school bus technicians is also being planned as part of the program. Shown here are students learning electricity fundamentals at American River College.

An electric bus maintenance train-the-trainer class for school bus technicians is also being planned as part of the program. Shown here are students learning electricity fundamentals at American River College.

Curriculum

Weckman, who heads up the diesel/clean diesel technology and automotive collision technology programs at American River College, works with Twin Rivers USD to provide curriculum for the district’s technician classes at the two high schools, and has taught similar classes at other high schools in the area. He is now developing the curriculum for the electric school bus repair program.

The program will cover basic electricity fundamentals, including how electricity flows, resistance, circuitry, and Ohm’s Law, to high school and college students.

“High school students [in particular] have to learn all about the technology to move up,” Shannon says.

There is no prerequisite to take the classes. Students just need to have the desire to learn, he adds.

The class is also working on the components of an electric vehicle using electric Go Karts. Weckman ordered six of the recreational vehicles for the Rio Linda High School class for students to troubleshoot and eventually run in an obstacle course competition on Rio Linda Farm and Tractor Days in May.

“The students are pretty hands-on,” Weckman says. “They need to be engaged, and Go Karts are fun.”

A train-the-trainer class at the college for school bus shop technicians will be another part of the program. Technicians will be able to take three or four electric heavy-duty vehicles and diagnostics classes.

“We start with the basics: how electricity works, and then get into more advanced electronics in the type of bus, and more specifics, such as the motor generators, charging system, and trouble codes,” Weckman explains.

Students will be familiarized with electric bus systems and troubleshooting for a total of 16 hours in the train-the-trainer sessions.

Another curriculum resource comes from The Lion Electric Bus Co.: it recently opened a teaching space nearby, and will train some of the district’s students.

Located in Sacramento, the Experience Center is designed to be a community education center, where people can get more tangible experience with two demo buses and charging infrastructure, and even drive an electric bus.

Because the Experience Center is so close to the Twin Rivers USD, says Nate Baguio, vice president of sales for The Lion Electric Co., the electric school bus manufacturer is making its entire infrastructure available to any students involved in the training program. They’ll be able to learn about the bus and charging infrastructure and talk to the engineers, not only about the current technology, but about the future of electric vehicles in a place where they are designed and built.

“It’s going to give them a view of different types of jobs, as well as immediate training to begin working in the electric vehicle field,” Baguio says.

The Lion Electric Co. will supply parts that are unique to electric vehicles, versus those with combustible engines, such as software and batteries, to the program.

“They want to prepare them for what the state of California has already determined is the future,” Baguio says. “It’s mandated for all transit buses to be fully zero emission by 2040. Many counties are committing to 2030. They are preparing students at the high school and community college level to be the technicians of the future, to learn a trade that will rapidly become part of the school’s curriculum.”

Baguio echoes Shannon and Weckman on career opportunities: In tandem with these training programs, there is also job growth. In particular, Lion is hiring.

“We have a growing sales staff, and are hiring technicians now,” Baguio says. “Along with this new technology is job growth in California. There are jobs emerging not just through Lion, but through [companies] that supply the components that go into our buses for this new technology and evolution of the school bus.” (See sidebar below for more information about the Experience Center.)

Additional Partnerships

The project involves a team effort with several players. In addition to American River College, Shannon, who acts as the project’s liaison on behalf of Twin Rivers USD, is working with Sacramento Clean Cities, Sacramento County, the City of Sacramento, Sacramento Regional Transit, Sacramento Municipal Utility District, Priority Bus Sales, and The California Council on Diesel Education and Technology, to eventually fund, supply, and build a completely alternative-fuel facility for more high school and college-level classes.

Shannon advises those who want to set up a similar training program in their district or high school to first get buy-in from those who manage career and technical education. Then, partner with a local college that has similar courses or objectives. He also recommends teaming up with manufacturers that the transportation department works with on its buses for additional support.

Next Steps

Shannon is looking to secure an additional class location as well as electric school buses and parts for students to work with.

“We’re working on it, but it’s not like there’s extras laying around at this point,” he says.

CARB, via the California Energy Commission, recently approved American River College for funding to provide the train-the-trainer sessions to technicians in an effort to standardize training at community colleges and high schools. The funding will also be used to supply buses and equipment, including motor generators, software, and a charging system. Review of hydrogen and lithium-ion batteries may also be added to the curriculum, Weckman says.

The Lion Electric Co. opened the Lion Experience Center in Sacramento, California, in November.

The Lion Electric Co. opened the Lion Experience Center in Sacramento, California, in November.

New ‘Experience Center’ Sparks Electric Bus Education

Manufacturer of electric school buses The Lion Electric Co. opened the Lion Experience Center in Sacramento, California, in November. The center is a teaching space available to school districts, fleet operators, and agencies to learn about electric vehicle capabilities, charging, available grants, and to tour the vehicles.

Nate Baguio, vice president of sales for The Lion Electric Co., says that there is a demand from school districts as well as the state of California to buy more electric school buses, but that more education on adopting the buses is needed — which is where the teaching facility can help.

“We have discovered that as we go out to sell school buses through grant programs, there seems be more of a need to provide education to people who are adopting [electric] school buses, rather than sell them a specific type of vehicle,” Baguio says.

With over $400 million in grants available in California for the purchase of electric vehicles, The Lion Electric Co. is providing training sessions to districts and companies that are thinking about pursuing some of that funding. The center also offers technician training before they buy any buses, so they can get comfortable and understand how their shop, scheduling, and training will be affected, he adds.

Representatives from grant agencies such as California Air Resources Board and the Environmental Protection Agency have also participated in training at The Experience Center, as have several transportation directors in the state.

This is the first of a handful of centers. The electric school bus manufacturer will open another Lion Experience Center in Albany, New York, later in 2019, and is planning other centers throughout California, Baguio says.
About the author
Nicole Schlosser

Nicole Schlosser

Former Executive Editor

Nicole was an editor and writer for School Bus Fleet. She previously worked as an editor and writer for Metro Magazine, School Bus Fleet's sister publication.

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