SBF 70 years logo
MenuMENU
SearchSEARCH

3 Texas districts purchase propane-powered buses

Three Texas school districts — Alvin Independent School District (ISD), Angleton ISD and Lindale ISD — are adding Blue Bird Corp. Propane-Powered Vis...

July 23, 2009
2 min to read


Three Texas school districts — Alvin Independent School District (ISD), Angleton ISD and Lindale ISD — are adding Blue Bird Corp. Propane-Powered Vision school buses to their fleets for the upcoming school year.

Alvin and Angleton ISD received $290,680 in grants and cash reimbursements for their purchases from the Texas Railroad Commission (TRC) and Blue Bird school bus distributor Rush Enterprises, while Lindale ISD received $61,890 in grants and cash reimbursements.

Ad Loading...

Alvin and Angleton have purchased 23 propane-powered buses; Lindale has purchased three. Bryan Mendez, Lindale ISD’s transportation director, learned about the benefits of the alternative fuel when he attended a Breathe Easy Propane School Bus workshop hosted by TRC Commissioner Michael Williams last year.

Williams said propane-powered school buses reduce emissions and are a great value for taxpayers through lower fuel and operating costs. They also qualify for federal alternative motor vehicle and alternative fuel tax credits.

Moreover, because Alvin and Angleton ISD are located in Brazoria County, and Lindale ISD is located in Smith County, the buses are eligible for state grants from TRC’s Propane Equipment Initiative.

The initiative is funded by the Texas Commission on Environmental Quality’s Emission Reduction Plan fund that aims to reduce emissions in air quality non-attainment and near non-attainment counties.

“Alvin ISD is receiving $129,680 from the TRC’s Propane Equipment Initiative,” Williams said, “and Rush Enterprises is issuing Alvin and Angleton a reimbursement of $7,000 per bus through the federal Alternative Motor Vehicle Tax Credit, which adds up to $161,000 for the 23 buses.”

Ad Loading...

Williams noted that the 50 cents per gallon federal tax credit brings Lindale ISD’s cost per gallon for propane to $1.01, compared to $1.73 for diesel.

“On top of that, Lindale ISD is receiving an estimated $40,890 from the TRC’s Propane Equipment Initiative,” Williams said. He added that Lindale's reimbursement through the tax credit adds up to $21,000 for the three buses.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

More Alternative Fuels

Front view of an IC Bus next generation electric CE Series bus driving on a suburban street.
Alternative Fuelsby Elora HaynesFebruary 27, 2026

EPA Opens Clean School Bus Program RFI, 2024 Rebates Halted

The EPA will open a 45-day comment period and is planning a March 3 webinar as it reshapes Clean School Bus funding for 2026.

Read More →
An orange and yellow graphic with a black and white image of InCharge Energy employees working on the management system platform.
Alternative Fuelsby Elora HaynesFebruary 23, 2026

Alt-Fuel Moves: Funding Boosts & Charging Innovations

Check out some of the latest moves where alternative fuels and school buses intersect, including electric bus and charging deployments, new funding opportunities, and a new management system.

Read More →
School Bus Fleet graphic with green theme and moss sphere image, headline “Greenhouse Gas Standards Update,” subhead “EPA Officially Repeals 2009 Endangerment Finding,” and photo of a yellow school bus driving away.
Alternative Fuelsby Staff and News ReportsFebruary 18, 2026

EPA Officially Rolls Back Federal GHG Standards

The federal administration called its 2009 Endangerment Finding rescission "the single largest deregulatory action in U.S. history." It eliminates greenhouse gas emission standards for all vehicles and engines for model years 2012 to 2027 and beyond.

Read More →
Ad Loading...
An orgnge, white, and black graphic with a black and white image ofpropane school buses.
Alternative Fuelsby Elora HaynesJanuary 30, 2026

Alt-Fuel Moves: Product Innovations & Funding Outlooks

Check out some of the latest moves where alternative fuels and school buses intersect, including electric and propane bus deployments, new EV products, and an update from CARB.

Read More →
SponsoredJanuary 19, 2026

3 New Ways Fleet Software Pays: ROI opportunities for modern fleet managers

Keeping buses safe, reliable, and on schedule requires more than manual processes. This eBook explores how modern fleet software supports school transportation teams with automated maintenance scheduling, smarter video safety tools, and integrated data systems. Discover practical ways fleets are reducing breakdowns, improving safety, and saving valuable staff time.

Read More →
An orgnge, white, and black graphic with a black and white image of electric school buses.
Alternative Fuelsby Elora HaynesJanuary 14, 2026

Alt-Fuel Moves: Manufacturing Growth & Energy Storage Expansion

Check out some of the latest moves where alternative fuels and school buses intersect, including manufacturing expansions, major funding awards, and energy storage strategies.

Read More →
Ad Loading...
A man connecting a Zenobē charger to a school bus.
ManagementDecember 12, 2025

Electric School Bus Financing: Making Fleet Transitions Operationally Sustainable for the Long Haul

Electric school bus success hinges on long-term planning, which means smart financing, battery management, and service-based models that keep fleets reliable for years.

Read More →
An orgnge, white, and black graphic with a black and white detail shot of lights on a school bus.
Alternative Fuelsby Elora HaynesDecember 8, 2025

Alt-Fuel Moves: New V2G Tech and Electric Bus Rollouts

Check out some of the latest moves where alternative fuels and school buses intersect, including new product announcements and bus deployments across the U.S.

Read More →
Row of yellow school buses parked in a lot with the Nuvve logo and an electric charging icon overlaid in the foreground.
Alternative Fuelsby News/Media ReleaseDecember 1, 2025

Nuvve Strikes Deal to Electrify N.M. District School Buses

Nuvve’s latest partnership in New Mexico aims to help districts transition to electric school buses while strengthening local grid reliability.

Read More →
Ad Loading...
A black and white image of a Thomas Built Wattson bus with text reading "Electric Buses: Progress, Promise, and the Practical Road Ahead."
Alternative FuelsNovember 21, 2025

Electric School Buses: Progress, Promise, and the Practical Road Ahead

The push for electric school buses grows, but real-world hurdles mean districts are adopting EVs slowly and mixing them with diesel and propane.

Read More →