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newsrel -- ARB fines MV Transportation, Inc. subsidiary Vallejo Citizens Transit $388,000

Posted: 08 Oct 2014 14:53:03
Please consider the following news release from the California
Air Resources Board: http://bit.ly/1qjr1s0
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FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

October 08, 2014

NEWS RELEASE 14-73

CONTACT:

Karen Caesar
(916) 322-2990
karen.caesar@arb.ca.gov

ARB fines MV Transportation, Inc. subsidiary Vallejo Citizens
Transit $388,000

$100,000 to go towards cleaning up school buses, protecting
children’s health and ensuring home-to-school transportation in
up-to-date fleets 


SACRAMENTO- The Air Resources Board has fined the Vallejo
Citizens Transit Co., a subsidiary of Dallas, Texas-based MV
Transportation, Inc., $387,750 for serious air quality violations
that occurred when it was under contract for bus services to the
City of Vallejo.

The Air Resources Board (ARB) began its investigation in 2010
when an informant alleged ongoing tampering of diesel particulate
filters by the company.  After conducting two inspections, ARB
staff confirmed that the filters and back pressure sensors were
tampered with on multiple diesel-powered buses owned by the City
of Vallejo but serviced and operated under contract by Vallejo
Citizens Transit Co. (VCTC).  Investigators also discovered that
VCTC’s maintenance personnel were using a power washer to clean
the filters. This practice damages the filters by causing the
accumulated soot and ash to harden and plug the filters leading
to cracking and premature failure.

“This private business served the public and must be held
accountable for its violation of the public’s trust,” said ARB
Enforcement Chief Jim Ryden. “Unfortunately, Vallejo Citizens
Transit Co. and its parent company, MV Transportation, Inc., had
to learn the hard way that it never pays to circumvent the law.
Their blatant disregard for basic pollution prevention resulted
in a significant penalty.” 

VCTC violations included failing to:

•	Properly maintain diesel particulate filters; 
•	Regularly self-inspect its diesel vehicles as required by state
law; 
•	Comply with emission control label regulations, and 
•	Comply with urban bus emission reduction requirements.

During its initial efforts to settle the case, Air Resources
Board staff met with VCTC representatives on several occasions
but no agreement was reached, and the case was referred to the
Office of the Attorney General for litigation in Solano County
Superior Court. The case was settled through mediation on April
29, 2014.  

Since the case began in 2010, the cities of Vallejo and Benicia
merged their transit agencies, which are now doing business under
a Joint Powers Authority as Sol-Trans.  To bring its transit
fleet back into compliance, the City of Vallejo purchased and
installed new diesel particulate filters and also replaced some
buses.  The city ended its contract with VCTC in mid-2013 and the
company has since dissolved, although MV Transportation, Inc.,
continues to operate subsidiaries in 29 states.

As outlined in the settlement agreement, VCTC paid $290,000 to
ARB’s Air Pollution Control Fund to support air quality research.
The company also paid $97,750 to the San Joaquin Valley Air
Pollution Control District School Bus Supplemental Environmental
Project.  These funds will be used to retrofit older school buses
with diesel particulate filters so that they are in compliance
with the state’s Truck and Bus Regulation. 

Diesel exhaust contains a variety of harmful gases and over 40
other known cancer-causing compounds. In 1998, California
identified diesel particulate matter as a toxic air contaminant
based on its potential to cause cancer, premature death and other
health problems.



California is in a drought emergency.
Visit www.SaveOurH2O.org for water conservation tips.

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