Thursday, March 26, 2026

Where the rubber meets the road: MBTA questions if electric bus mandate is worth the tradeoffs

                                                                                                                              

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BOTTLES: Just one-third of the eligible bottles and cans sold in Massachusetts were redeemed last year under the state’s recycling-incentivizing deposit law, a new low as advocates struggle to gain traction for reforms. Jordan Wolman dives into the ongoing fight. 

IMMIGRATION: The Massachusetts House approved new limits Wednesday on how local and state entities interact with federal immigration enforcement, including a ban on most civil immigration arrests in courthouses. That could disrupt a status quo in which Bay State courts and ICE have agreed to “soft diplomacy,” according to a top judicial leader. Colin Young unpacks the situation for State House News Service. 

Four years ago, as part of a surge of go-getter climate optimism that fueled a legally binding state commitment to slash greenhouse gas emissions, Beacon Hill ordered the MBTA to switch its entire fleet of fossil fuel-reliant buses to electric-powered vehicles. For months, if not years, however, it’s been an open secret in transportation circles that the T will not come close to hitting the deadlines lawmakers set for that multibillion-dollar changeover.

Many voices argue that it’s not all the T’s fault. Yes, the monumental undertaking has already featured budget overruns and complicated planning, but there’s also a market mismatch, with multiple transit agencies across the country competing for a constrained supply of battery electric buses. Federal policy under the Trump administration is changing, too, making it more difficult to get money from Washington for electric buses.

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Just over four and a half years before the first major deadline, T higher-ups concede that the agency is almost certainly in no position to comply in time. What’s more, they are ready to tee up a bigger question that seems sure to stir thorny debate: Is the push for a rapid transition to an all-electric bus fleet even worth the tradeoffs?

The MBTA today has about 1,100 buses, all but a tiny fraction of which run on diesel fuel, compressed natural gas, or hybrid sources. The cost to replace all of those with vehicles that spew virtually no emissions, and to build out the unique maintenance and charging infrastructure they require, is several billion dollars under the most optimistic estimates, and the notoriously cash-strapped T is already struggling with limited capacity for funding big projects.

But even if the money materialized overnight, the MBTA would still need to sequence and execute a series of major garage retrofit and construction projects over the next decade and a half. Today, officials are ready to say they don’t think they can do that without taking several facilities offline, temporarily forcing significant reductions to bus service.

All of that raises the question of how best to use limited resources. Some transit advocates argue spending hundreds of millions or billions on expanding bus service, regardless of the kind of fuel the vehicles burn, will make a bigger difference toward overall emissions by getting more drivers to leave their cars at home.

Altogether, it’s the latest spasm of uncertainty muddying the state’s aspirations to lead the nation in climate policy, coming just a few months after lawmakers in House floated the idea of weakening a statewide 2030 decarbonization mandate. Beneath both issues is the same difficult reckoning as lofty goals collide with the everyday reality of executing complicated change.

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WHILE THIS IS A "MUST READ" IT IGNORES PERSONAL RESPONSIBLITY TO REDUCE YOUR CONSUMPTION! 

POLITICAL HYSTERIA AND OVER-REACTION SHOULD NOT IGNORE THE 

IMPORTANCE OF "REDUCE YOUR CONSUMPTION"!

Just COICIDENTALLY, WE BEGAN SIMPLE PROJECTS SUCH AS REPLACING CFLs with leds and other trivial projects prior to trump's war with iran....our energy bills are unchanged....


each of us can reduce our energy consumption -  free or 

inexepensively...


INSURANCE: Massachusetts insurance commissioner Michael Caljouw sat down with CommonWealth Beacon’s Jordan Wolman for a wide-ranging conversation about the insurance industry, affordability, health care, and climate change.  

OPINION: Despite the current political backlash against all things branded “woke,” socially responsible investing still makes sense – and cents, says Patrick McVeigh, founder of a Boston investment firm. 

CLIMATE TECH: State policymakers are betting big on the economic potential of companies developing technology to fight climate change, but the Trump administration’s sustained opposition threatens the nascent industry. (WBUR) 

PRISONS: Three of the six inmates who died by suicide in Massachusetts prisons last year had been held in segregated units that an independent consultant warned could have increased suicide risks(The Boston Globe – paywall)  

POLICE: Several legal experts defended Suffolk County District Attorney Kevin Hayden’s approach to charging Boston police officer Nicholas O’Malley with manslaughter, saying prosecutors are following the same process used for non-law enforcement defendants. (GBH News) 

EARLY COLLEGE: State leaders are taking initial steps toward executing Gov. Maura Healey’s goal of expanding early college enrollment tenfold over the next decade, starting with posting a job for someone who could lead the effort. (State House News Service – paywall) 

TRANSIT PERMISSION: Boston Mayor Michelle Wu’s administration has come under fire for slowing progress on transportation projects, and emails released through a records request show that a city transit planner in February told the MBTA he had been instructed not to participate in any planning meetings with external agencies unless he got “express approval” from City Hall. (StreetsblogMASS) 

 
 
 
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Today in Politics, Bulletin 335. 3/26/26

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