Washington is paying hundreds of millions of dollars under President Barack Obama's economic stimulus plan to build new, cleaner-burning buses, but that won't necessarily result in a burst of job openings soon at major manufacturers or suppliers.
The bus money, like many other programs in the $787 billion stimulus plan, is having the less glamorous and harder-to-quantify effect of keeping workers employed, providing a slight buffer from the recession to some in the auto industry.
At the White House, where saving jobs always was as much a priority as creating jobs, the bus industry is a success story. But it also shows how hard it is to account for that success, especially in an industry that keeps shedding jobs despite the stimulus.
"The stimulus has been a plus, but it's just, how do you do the math?" said Patrick Scully, chief commercial officer at Daimler Buses North America Inc, which operates plants in New York and North Carolina. "You could say, without it things would be worse."
The dollar signs in the stimulus law seem to foreshadow a bull market for companies that build buses, engines, transmissions and axles. Connecticut has budgeted $71 million to buy hybrid buses. New Jersey will spend $35 million to rehabilitate its fleet. Rural Oklahoma counties and Cape Cod, Massachusetts, vacation spots have bus projects in the works.
Because local governments are strapped for cash, some companies braced for a slowdown in transit spending. The stimulus is more likely to keep things stable than send sales booming, industry executives said.
"The initial forecasts from a number of customers looked pretty bad," said Jack Schimenti, vice president of Lincoln Composites, of Lincoln, Nebraska, which makes fuel systems for bus manufacturers.
Thanks to the stimulus law, forecasts are more stable now. Schimenti expects stimulus-related orders to begin late this year. At North American Bus Industries of Anniston, Alabama, it's the same story.
"It helps preserve the jobs that we have," said Joseph Gibson, senior vice president for sales. "We don't have plans for any massive hiring. Right now we're just trying to maintain stability."
New Flyer Industries, a Canadian company that runs manufacturing plants in Minnesota, said its sales were up before the stimulus and the new spending will probably keep sales and employment stable. In March, an administration task force on the middle class, led by Vice President Joe Biden, held a session at a New Flyer bus garage in St. Cloud, Minnesota.
At Daimler Buses, Scully says he can already point to 200 bus orders with stimulus money and he expects more soon. Sales forecasts for 2009 and 2010 are steady, he said. "I would guarantee you, without this stimulus bill, we would have to curtail our operations," he said.
That could be a campaign sound bite for President Obama's re-election effort. The problem is, neither Scully nor Gibson, nor managers in countless other industries, have hard numbers on how many jobs were saved. The White House says it has already created or saved 150,000 jobs, a number that is impossible to verify.
The bus industry also reveals a political truth for the Obama administration: Even in industries where the stimulus is working, White House job estimates will be overshadowed until the economy turns around. For example, engine-maker Cummins Inc stands to benefit from bus spending. The Columbus, Indiana, company makes diesel and natural gas engines and is a major supplier for bus companies. Cummins also hopes to benefit from stimulus money to reduce pollution from old diesel engines.
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