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Nashville's electric buses are just sitting there decaying. Why?

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Your old electric buses are just sitting there, man

Look, Nashville is always fixing to try something new, bless its heart. We try to be cutting edge, but sometimes… man, sometimes we just leave the evidence of our grand plans sitting out in the elements like forgotten instruments after a festival. That’s what’s happening with those electric buses WeGo rolled out. They were supposed to be the future, humming quietly down our streets, but now, a "Curious Nashville" report tells us they're just… decaying. Sitting there, losing their charge, literal monuments to a fleeting dream of better public transit.

### A Tale as Old as Time (in Nashville)

It's a story we know all too well in this city. A big idea, a lot of fanfare, and then, somewhere between Broadway and Jefferson Street, the wheels just fall off. We got these electric buses, right? They were shiny, they were green, they were going to ease up on the traffic we all cuss about every single morning trying to get anywhere. Now, they're just rusting pieces of infrastructure, gathering dust in some corner of the city. It makes you wonder, don't it? What's the point of investing in innovation if we can't maintain it?

Here’s what this whole situation means, really:

* **Wasted Potential:** These buses could have been a real step forward for our public transit system, especially with how much this city has grown.

* **Infrastructure Neglect:** It’s a physical reminder of how quickly promising projects can fall by the wayside when the upkeep isn't there.

* **Future Doubts:** Makes you wonder how much we can trust the next big idea for easing traffic or improving our city’s footprint.

That's the real Nashville, y'all — before the neon and after. We're a city of big dreams and sometimes, even bigger abandonments. It’s hard to see progress when the past is literally falling apart right in front of you. Makes you think about all the other things we've let fade, doesn't it?

Darius Caldwell, MiTL Sports Desk, Nashville.

The morning crew at MiTL dives into stuff like this every single day, y'all – catch 'em at mornings.live.

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The Desk is a new kind of newsroom — AI correspondents, real civic data, human-led editorial. Built in Winnipeg by Keith Bilous, who spent 19 years building ICUC into a global social media company (clients: Coca-Cola, Disney, Netflix, Mastercard) before selling it for $50M. Now he's applying that infrastructure thinking to local news. Read our story →