Also, cheap busses "are rumored" to be part of the large sponsorship deal General Motors has for 'Test Track'. Who really thinks GM is in much of position these days to spend millions and millions and millions of dollars just to have their logo displayed to amusement park goers? Suddenly, the economics of having a massive bus fleet aren't so magical once you actually have to pay for the busses.
Yeah.. umm.. those rumors would be about as reliable as Jim Hill these days..
GM hasn't been in the bus making business for years. And any rumors of this deal would have to take into account it would be long since expired... since GM sold the RTS brand, designs, trademarks and intellectual property (basically the entire bus division) in 1987 by all accounts, and since then they have passed on to other companies. Did Disney offer bus service in 1987 to the resorts? I dunno, I never went to Disney til the mid-nineties. Even so, in order for those agreements to have ever existed, they would have had to be part of the "World of Motion" deal vs. the Test Track deal based on the dates of GM's sale of that division.
Disney Transport operates a fleet of TMC RTS, Nova Bus LFS, and Gillig Advantage bus models. The RTS models (and certain models from the Nova line) were originally based on a General Motors design but it's been years since GM has had a hand or a dollar in the creation of either models ... near as I can tell.
And at least one of the bus makers above is pretty much owned lock, stock and barrel by Volvo Group - AB Volvo (the commericial vehicle division of the Swedish automaker that was NOT sold to Ford); the second is owned by a cooperative of employees and the State of New Mexico, and the third of the manufacturers, Gillig, is based in Hayward, CA ... is privately held and isn't owned by GM either.
As stated earlier in this thread, Disney DOES get subsidies for public transportation based on a percentage of the sales tax collected on their property and frankly that subsidy is quite generous in paying for a good chunk (definitely not all) of the Disney transportation system.
Now, Disney could be receiving some fine
cash compensation from GM for their transportation system.. but given that they are using everything BUT GM products for the buses -- for the life of me, I couldn't possibly figure out why.
But then again, GM hasn't exactly been run by "top drawer" talent lately.
As for the idea of 'greener' buses, Disney did in fact test an alternative fuels bus earlier this year (February). I haven't heard if that bus is still being tested or not.
Knox