Traffic & Transit
Farmingdale State College Expands Electric Vehicle Fleet
The college aims to go all electric by 2035 to reduce greenhouse gas emissions.

FARMINGDALE, NY — Farmingdale State College added two new electric vehicles to its campus vehicle fleet, bringing its total of electric (EV) or hybrid vehicles to five, and moving closer to its goal of going fossil fuel-free by 2035, the college announced.
The two 2023 Nissan Leaf vehicles are four-door compact size cars and join a 2013 Nissan Leaf, a 2013 Toyota Prius, and a 2013 Chevy Volt, all of which are driven by campus vehicles-authorized operators. The cars are branded with the FSC logo on the front doors and a "FSC Electric Vehicle" logo on the rear doors, with the motif of a globe blanketed by a leaf. The cars retail for a base price of $36K.
"With a maximum range of 250 miles, fast charging port and installed spare charger, our electric vehicles are more than capable of handling all of our in-state driving business," said Michael Cervini, campus energy manager at FSC. "These cars will be used by staff traveling for recruitment or professional development purposes."
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The school expanded its electrical vehicle fleet ahead of Gov. Kathy Hochul's executive order for all stage agencies to achieve certain sustainability and emissions goals, said Greg O'Connor, executive vice president and chief financial officer at FSC.
"Combined with our campus bike share program, water conservation initiatives and planned upgrades to our HVAC systems and installation of green energy technology in our new science building, the vision is to exceed those benchmarks."
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FSC received an Honorable Mention as a Bike Friendly University from the League of American Bicyclists in October.
O’Connor noted that the green energy program is part of the commitment to environmental issues that students are looking for when choosing a college.
"Students want their school to embrace the values that they do, using less energy, reducing carbon footprint and taking steps that will help to reverse decades of damage to our planet," O'Connor said. "We believe in those values as much as they do and are embarking on these plans to make a long lasting impact to the environmental health of Long Island."
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