Inland Valley

Hydrogen-powered transit bus to debut soon in Pomona, Claremont

The first hydrogen-powered public bus in Los Angeles County will go into service early next month, a historic milestone that will unleash an army of similar, zero-emission buses that don’t connect to the power grid and run longer without refueling.

  • Foothill Transit bus driver Refugio Dimas, center right, lowers the handicapped ramp on one of the transportation companies new hydrogen powered buses as trainer Mark Marquez, center left, in the company’s maintenance yard in Pomona on Tuesday, Nov. 15, 2022. Three of the hydrogen-powered buses will go into service next month with another 30 expected to be up and running next year. (Photo by Will Lester, Inland Valley Daily Bulletin/SCNG)

  • Foothill Transit bus driver Refugio Dimas, right, receives instructions on how to drive one of the transportation companies new hydrogen-powered buses by trainer Mark Marquez, left, in the company’s maintenance yard in Pomona on Tuesday, Nov. 15, 2022. Three of the hydrogen-powered buses will go into service next month with another 30 expected to be up and running next year. (Photo by Will Lester, Inland Valley Daily Bulletin/SCNG)

  • The new hydrogen-powered transportation buses at the Foothill Transit maintenance yard will run on compressed hydrogen as seen in Pomona on Tuesday, Nov. 15, 2022. Three of the hydrogen-powered buses will go into service next month with another 30 expected to be up and running next year. (Photo by Will Lester, Inland Valley Daily Bulletin/SCNG)

  • Foothill Transit technical instructor Homer Atwood, right, speaks with mechanics about the workings of a hydrogen-powered transit bus engine in Pomona on Tuesday, Nov. 15, 2022. Three of the hydrogen-powered buses will go into service next month with another 30 expected to be up and running next year. (Photo by Will Lester, Inland Valley Daily Bulletin/SCNG)

  • Foothill Transit mechanics Santiago Granados and Oscar Ramirez look at the hydrogen-powered transit bus engine in the maintenance yard in Pomona on Tuesday, Nov. 15, 2022. Three of the hydrogen-powered buses will go into service next month with another 30 expected to be up and running next year. (Photo by Will Lester, Inland Valley Daily Bulletin/SCNG)

  • A new hydrogen-powered Foothill Transit bus sits in the company’s maintenance yard in Pomona on Tuesday, Nov. 15, 2022. Three of the hydrogen-powered buses will go into service next month with another 30 expected to be up and running next year. (Photo by Will Lester, Inland Valley Daily Bulletin/SCNG)

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Foothill Transit is readying three new hydrogen fuel-cell electric buses for revenue service starting Dec. 5 on Line 291, which serves Pomona, Claremont and La Verne. The next set of hydrogen buses will be used on Line 486, which runs from the El Monte Bus Station to Mount San Antonio College in Walnut and Cal Poly Pomona university, said Felicia Friesema, the agency’s director of marketing and communications.

The bus agency soon will receive its full order of 33 hydrogen fuel cell buses, the largest order in North America, she said. Foothill estimates all 33 will be running by mid-February 2023.The buses are manufactured by New Flyer, a Canadian company.

Passengers will notice a quieter ride but the buses look exactly the same size as most of its fleet, about 40-feet long and seat 36 passengers. The sides of these clean-energy buses are painted with colorful nature scenes, including one with sea creatures and another depicting the iconic mountains and waterfalls of Yosemite National Park, all with the words: “Zero emissions: Hydrogen Fuel Cell.”

The hydrogen buses produce zero emissions, emitting only water.

These will replace some older battery electric plug-in buses that are also zero-emission, a wash in air pollution outcomes. But some will replace buses that run on Compressed Natural Gas (CNG), a fuel much cleaner than diesel but one that still produces greenhouse gases (GHGs) that contribute to climate change.

One hydrogen bus will eliminate the 3,655 grams of carbon dioxide emitted per mile by a CNG bus, said Roland Cordero, director of maintenance and diesel technology for Foothill Transit. A hydrogen bus emits zero criteria air pollutants that create smog, and zero GHGs, including no CO2, a main contributor to the increase in the Earth’s temperature that has lead to rising ocean tides, flooding and more intense hurricanes and wildfires.

“We are cleaning up the air in Los Angeles County,” Cordero said.

Each bus costs about $1.2 million, Cordero said. That’s slightly more than a battery-electric bus at $950,000, he added.

Foothill’s 33 hydrogen fuel cell buses represents 9% of its fleet of about 359 buses. The transit agency runs buses along the San Gabriel and Pomona Valley foothill communities of LA County, into downtown Los Angeles, north Orange County and the west end of San Bernardino County.

It will be the first agency to deploy this newest zero-emission bus in Los Angeles County. LA Metro does not have any hydrogen buses and none are on order, said Dave Sotero, Metro spokesman in an email. Metro is slowly replacing its CNG buses with battery-electric plug-in buses.

The Orange County Transportation Authority has 10 hydrogen-powered buses that have been in operation since early 2020, said Joel Zlotnik, spokesperson. OCTA was the first in Southern California to operate a hydrogen bus. The Riverside County-based SunLine Transit Agency in Palm Springs has 21 hydrogen fuel cell buses in operation, the agency reported.

Hydrogen fuel-cell buses line up in Santa Ana facility of OCTA. The Orange County Transportation Authority is the first to operate hydrogen-powered buses in Southern California (photo courtesy of OCTA).

Omnitrans in San Bernardino County received $9.3 million in federal funding to combat climate change and reduce air pollution, said Rep. Pete Aguilar on Nov. 16 in a prepared statement. The money will be used to buy four hydrogen fuel cell buses.

The California Air Resources Board (CARB) requires a changeover to zero-emission buses by 2040 to cut down on smog-related pollutants and greenhouse gases. Foothill Transit in 2010 was the first transit agency in the region to put a battery-electric bus into service.

“We do pride ourselves on being innovative. We are meeting CARB rules while doing it in a way that make sense  for our service profile and our customers,” Friesema said.

The agency’s first electric buses were 11 years old when they began having mechanical problems, most recently in 2021. One caught fire, while others needed parts that were unavailable and remained unusable for months. Up to 67% of its electric buses were not operating during 2019 and 2020, according to a report from this newspaper group. Many were paid for using taxpayer dollars out of the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009 passed by Congress after the Great Recession.

Foothill hopes to replace those buses with new hydrogen buses.

Hydrogen buses a better fit

With the passenger car industry producing battery-electric vehicles to help wean America off fossil fuels and reduce carbon-based gases that add to global climate change, some bus agencies are trying out hydrogen power instead. Foothill says there are several reasons why hydrogen is a better fit:

First, hydrogen buses travel 300 miles without stopping for refueling, as compared to battery-electric buses that need to recharge after 150 miles, said Cordero.

Hydrogen fuel-cell buses don’t need to stop mid service for refueling, as do battery-electric buses, he added.

These buses don’t plug into the grid, putting no added strain on regional electricity production. Also, a battery-electric bus takes between two and four hours to charge; re-fueling a hydrogen fuel-cell bus takes seven to 10 minutes, he said.

Last, the hydrogen refueling system can be laid into the existing CNG refueling infrastructure, keeping costs down, he said.

A 25,000-gallon hydrogen tank will eventually supply fuel to 33 Foothill Transit buses at the transportation company maintenance yard in Pomona on Tuesday, Nov. 15, 2022. Three of the hydrogen-powered buses will go into service next month with another 30 expected to be up and running next year. (Photo by Will Lester, Inland Valley Daily Bulletin/SCNG)

Foothill transit is putting in place a 25,000-gallon hydrogen fuel tank and refueling system at its Pomona facility, where buses can easily refill, just as they do now for CNG fuel. The tank may be the largest in Southern California for a transit agency, surpassing OCTA’s 18,000-gallon tank.

How it works

A hydrogen fuel-cell bus is also an electric bus, only it does not plug in. It has lithium ion batteries that are constantly charged from a hydrogen fuel cell. In other words, it makes its own power.

The hydrogen is stored in six tanks affixed to the roof of the bus. Hydrogen gas comes down into the fuel cell stack. Once hydrogen (H2) combines with oxygen (O2) in the air, it creates electricity that charges the battery that turns the direct, rear-wheel drive.

Heat and water vapor are the only emissions, Cordero explained. Heat is used to warm the cabin. Water vapor (H2O) comes out of the exhaust pipe.

Hydrogen is flammable, as is gasoline and diesel. But it dissipates faster than gasoline, Cordero said. Sensors are in place at the tanks and inside the bus. If they detect a leak, the flow of hydrogen shuts down, he added.

Almost ready to roll

At the Foothill Transit large facility in Pomona, mechanics and drivers were getting training on the workings of the new bus.

“There are your parking brakes, your mirrors. There are your high-beams,” explained instructor Mark Marquez to driver Refugio Dimas, pointing out each one. Dimas was sitting in the driver’s seat and getting ready to take the hydrogen bus out for a practice ride on Tuesday, Nov. 15.

Before that, mechanics peered into the back of the bus, and also pointed out the refueling port, labeled “CH2,” which stands for Compressed Hydrogen (H2 is the chemical symbol for hydrogen).

Homer Atwood, technical instructor, explained how the fuel cell splits the hydrogen molecule into protons and electrons, the latter creating the electricity inside the battery that runs the bus.

The new technology has been around for decades. It has been tried in a Toyota car called the Mirai, with little acceptance by the public, mostly because hydrogen fueling stations are hard to come by. But fleets can import and save hydrogen in large tanks in a controlled, centralized fueling location, making it more convenient to use.

Still, the new, zero-emission technology is breaking barriers in the Southern California transportation world.

“We are an early adopter of new technology,” said Friesema. “It is something we feel very strongly about supporting.”

 

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Man charged with murder in San Jacinto crash that killed deputy, daughter

The man who authorities say was drunk and crashed head-on into an off-duty Riverside County sheriff’s correctional deputy, killing him and his daughter, has been charged with murder.

Scott Brandon Bales, 47, of Moreno Valley, was due to enter pleas on Thursday, Nov. 17, to two counts of second-degree murder and one count of driving under the influence causing great bodily injury. His hearing in Superior Court in Banning was postponed to Nov. 28.

The Riverside County District Attorney’s Office filed the charges on Wednesday.

Cpl. Daniel Jacks Jr., 45, of San Jacinto, and 19-year-old Hannah Jacks were traveling east on Gilman Springs Road east of Bridge Street near San Jacinto at about 9 p.m. Sunday when Bales, driving west, crossed over two sets of double yellow lines, striking Daniel Jacks’ Honda Insight, the California Highway Patrol said.

Jacks and his passenger, identified in the criminal complaint as victim Pacak Radek, were hospitalized and survived.

Riverside County Sheriff’s Department Correctional Corporal Daniel Jacks Jr. and his daughter, Hannah Jacks, pictured together, were killed in a collision on Sunday evening Nov. 13, 2022. (Photo courtesy Riverside County Sheriff’s Department)

Bales has not been licensed to drive in California since 2005, according to the state Department of Motor Vehicles. His license expired in 2005, and then it was revoked on March 30, 2015, the day Bales pleaded guilty in Superior Court in Orange County to felony DUI with three or more priors.

He has a total of four DUI convictions and has been convicted of driving on a suspended or revoked license at least three times, court records show.

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Man charged with murder in San Jacinto crash that killed deputy, daughter

The man who authorities say was drunk and crashed head-on into an off-duty Riverside County sheriff’s correctional deputy, killing him and his daughter, has been charged with murder.

Scott Brandon Bales, 47, of Moreno Valley, was due to enter pleas on Thursday, Nov. 17, to two counts of second-degree murder and one count of driving under the influence causing great bodily injury. His hearing in Superior Court in Banning was postponed to Nov. 28.

The Riverside County District Attorney’s Office filed the charges on Wednesday.

Cpl. Daniel Jacks Jr., 45, of San Jacinto, and 19-year-old Hannah Jacks were traveling east on Gilman Springs Road east of Bridge Street near San Jacinto at about 9 p.m. Sunday when Bales, driving west, crossed over two sets of double yellow lines, striking Daniel Jacks’ Honda Insight, the California Highway Patrol said.

Jacks and his passenger, identified in the criminal complaint as victim Pacak Radek, were hospitalized and survived.

Riverside County Sheriff’s Department Correctional Corporal Daniel Jacks Jr. and his daughter, Hannah Jacks, pictured together, were killed in a collision on Sunday evening Nov. 13, 2022. (Photo courtesy Riverside County Sheriff’s Department)

Bales has not been licensed to drive in California since 2005, according to the state Department of Motor Vehicles. His license expired in 2005, and then it was revoked on March 30, 2015, the day Bales pleaded guilty in Superior Court in Orange County to felony DUI with three or more priors.

He has a total of four DUI convictions and has been convicted of driving on a suspended or revoked license at least three times, court records show.

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Driver accused of killing Riverside County deputy and his daughter in collision lacked license since 2005, DMV says

The Moreno Valley man accused of driving drunk and crashing head-on into an off-duty Riverside County sheriff’s correctional deputy, killing the corporal and his daughter, had not owned a valid driver’s license for 17 years at the time of the collision, the state Department of Motor Vehicles said.

The license of Scott Brandon Bales, 47, expired in 2005, a DMV spokesman said Tuesday, Nov. 15. Then it was revoked on March 30, 2015, the day Bales pleaded guilty in Superior Court in Orange County to felony DUI with three or more priors, felony driving with a blood alcohol of .08 percent or higher with three or more priors, driving on a suspended license, a misdemeanor, and speeding.

Bales was sentenced to a year in jail — serving 290 days after receiving credit for time already served — and a year of mandatory supervision by the Probation Department. He was also ordered to attend a multiple-offender alcohol program. The conviction called for a sentence of 1-3 years, according to the law, so he received the midpoint.

And Bales was required to sign a document informing him that driving under the influence could result in injury to others and that a DUI conviction could be used against him in court. That document, known as a Watson Advisement, is often used in court against defendants who have been charged with second-degree murder. A conviction on that charge can bring a sentence of 15 years to life. Bales had not been charged as of Tuesday.

Before the 2015 plea, Bales was convicted of misdemeanor DUI in 2006, 2009 and 2011 in Riverside County, court records show. The Southern California News Group reported Monday that Bales had only three DUI convictions before discovering a fourth on Tuesday. Bales has been convicted of driving without a license at least three times.

The crash that killed the Cpl. Daniel Jacks Jr., 45, of San Jacinto, and 19-year-old Hannah Jacks happened just before 9 p.m. Sunday on Gilman Springs Road east of Bridge Street near San Jacinto. Bales was driving his Chevrolet Silverado west on Gilman Springs when he crossed over the divided highway and into eastbound traffic, striking Daniel Jacks’ Honda Insight, the California Highway Patrol said.

Daniel Jacks and Hannah Jacks died at the scene. Bales and his passenger were hospitalized and survived.

Driver accused of killing Riverside County deputy and his daughter in collision lacked license since 2005, DMV says Read More »

Driver accused of killing Riverside County deputy and his daughter in collision lacked license since 2005, DMV says

The Moreno Valley man accused of driving drunk and crashing head-on into an off-duty Riverside County sheriff’s correctional deputy, killing the corporal and his daughter, had not owned a valid driver’s license for 17 years at the time of the collision, the state Department of Motor Vehicles said.

The license of Scott Brandon Bales, 47, expired in 2005, a DMV spokesman said Tuesday, Nov. 15. Then it was revoked on March 30, 2015, the day Bales pleaded guilty in Superior Court in Orange County to felony DUI with three or more priors, felony driving with a blood alcohol of .08 percent or higher with three or more priors, driving on a suspended license, a misdemeanor, and speeding.

Bales was sentenced to a year in jail — serving 290 days after receiving credit for time already served — and a year of mandatory supervision by the Probation Department. He was also ordered to attend a multiple-offender alcohol program. The conviction called for a sentence of 1-3 years, according to the law, so he received the midpoint.

And Bales was required to sign a document informing him that driving under the influence could result in injury to others and that a DUI conviction could be used against him in court. That document, known as a Watson Advisement, is often used in court against defendants who have been charged with second-degree murder. A conviction on that charge can bring a sentence of 15 years to life. Bales had not been charged as of Tuesday.

Before the 2015 plea, Bales was convicted of misdemeanor DUI in 2006, 2009 and 2011 in Riverside County, court records show. The Southern California News Group reported Monday that Bales had only three DUI convictions before discovering a fourth on Tuesday. Bales has been convicted of driving without a license at least three times.

The crash that killed the Cpl. Daniel Jacks Jr., 45, of San Jacinto, and 19-year-old Hannah Jacks happened just before 9 p.m. Sunday on Gilman Springs Road east of Bridge Street near San Jacinto. Bales was driving his Chevrolet Silverado west on Gilman Springs when he crossed over the divided highway and into eastbound traffic, striking Daniel Jacks’ Honda Insight, the California Highway Patrol said.

Daniel Jacks and Hannah Jacks died at the scene. Bales and his passenger were hospitalized and survived.

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2 killed, 2 hurt in crash between Moreno Valley and San Jacinto

MORENO VALLEY — Two people died Sunday and two more were injured in a head-on collision in the Moreno Valley area.

Witnesses reported the crash at 8:57 p.m. on Gilman Springs Road at Bridge Street, according to the California Highway Patrol. That’s east of the city of Moreno Valley.

Two people were pronounced dead at the scene and two patients with serious injuries were taken to a hospital by ambulance, the Cal Fire/Riverside County Fire Department reported.

The fire agency reported the crash location as being west of San Jacinto.

The CHP was investigating.

 

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2 killed, 2 hurt in crash between Moreno Valley and San Jacinto

MORENO VALLEY — Two people died Sunday and two more were injured in a head-on collision in the Moreno Valley area.

Witnesses reported the crash at 8:57 p.m. on Gilman Springs Road at Bridge Street, according to the California Highway Patrol. That’s east of the city of Moreno Valley.

Two people were pronounced dead at the scene and two patients with serious injuries were taken to a hospital by ambulance, the Cal Fire/Riverside County Fire Department reported.

The fire agency reported the crash location as being west of San Jacinto.

The CHP was investigating.

 

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Hit-and-run leaves Perris woman dead on Highway 74

A hit-and-run left a woman dead at the scene after a silver Honda Accord struck her on Highway 74 southwest of Perris on Wednesday, Oct. 19, authorities said.

Perris resident Diana Aguirre, 34, was walking across Highway 74 prior to the crash, the California Highway Patrol said. As she headed southbound, she was struck at the Ethanac Road intersection shortly before 6 p.m. and thrown onto the westbound Accord’s windshield, according to the CHP.

The driver of the 2015 Accord, who appeared to be male, then fled the scene, heading west to an unknown location, the CHP said. The car was found abandoned off Highway 74 and Greenwald Avenue later in the evening, according to CHP officer Mike Lassig.

Authorities are hoping to locate the suspect from evidence in the vehicle, Lassig said.

Anyone with information about the crash was urged to contact CHP at 951-506-2000.

Hit-and-run leaves Perris woman dead on Highway 74 Read More »

Hit-and-run leaves Perris woman dead on Highway 74

A hit-and-run left a woman dead at the scene after a silver Honda Accord struck her on Highway 74 southwest of Perris on Wednesday, Oct. 19, authorities said.

Perris resident Diana Aguirre, 34, was walking across Highway 74 prior to the crash, the California Highway Patrol said. As she headed southbound, she was struck at the Ethanac Road intersection shortly before 6 p.m. and thrown onto the westbound Accord’s windshield, according to the CHP.

The driver of the 2015 Accord, who appeared to be male, then fled the scene, heading west to an unknown location, the CHP said. The car was found abandoned off Highway 74 and Greenwald Avenue later in the evening, according to CHP officer Mike Lassig.

Authorities are hoping to locate the suspect from evidence in the vehicle, Lassig said.

Anyone with information about the crash was urged to contact CHP at 951-506-2000.

Hit-and-run leaves Perris woman dead on Highway 74 Read More »

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