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A new program to electrify Front Range food trucks helps eliminate a “gaseous, terrible thing”

The Regional Air Quality Council also launched a free car repair program to fix older polluting models

Alex Maloof, owner and operator of Cafe Alejandro coffee truck, shows the Joule Case battery mounted in his truck that he bought with a grant from the Regional Air Quality Council's Engines Off for Food Trucks program, in Boulder, Colorado, on Nov. 26, 2024. (Photo by RJ Sangosti/The Denver Post)
Alex Maloof, owner and operator of Cafe Alejandro coffee truck, shows the Joule Case battery mounted in his truck that he bought with a grant from the Regional Air Quality Council’s Engines Off for Food Trucks program, in Boulder, Colorado, on Nov. 26, 2024. (Photo by RJ Sangosti/The Denver Post)
Noelle Phillips of The Denver Post.
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Regional Air Quality Council is rolling out a new program, Engines Off for Food Trucks, granting up to $20,000 to help food truck owners buy power systems that run on electricity to operate equipment.
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