Greensboro Transit Bus Catches Fire on West Wendover Avenue, No Injuries Reported
A Greensboro Transit Agency bus caught fire at West Wendover and Meadowood Street on Sunday. The cause remains undisclosed and GTA has not addressed service disruptions.

A Greensboro Transit Agency bus caught fire Sunday at the intersection of West Wendover Avenue and Meadowood Street, forcing the Greensboro Fire Department to respond to one of the city's most-traveled bus corridors while leaving riders without answers about service disruptions or the cause of the blaze.
No passengers or crew were injured. GTA and the Greensboro Fire Department have not publicly disclosed what ignited the bus.
The vehicle traveled Route 1, the Spring Garden Street/West Wendover Avenue line, which runs along a commercial stretch anchored near a Costco at the Meadowood Street end of West Wendover. Transit director Reginald Mason has described the route's purpose directly: "Our aim with this particular route is to give folks a one seat ride across town." With a bus from that same route now a fire scene, GTA had not announced as of Sunday whether service was interrupted, for how long, or whether a replacement vehicle was dispatched to cover the gap.
The bus's age and maintenance history have not been made public, and the agency has not announced any inspection sweep of its fleet in response to the incident.
Sunday's fire is not the first time West Wendover Avenue has drawn emergency response. In May, a red Ford pickup truck caught fire on the same road; the Greensboro Fire Department said that call came in around 2:25 p.m., again with no injuries. West Wendover has also been the site of a prior GTA collision, when one of the agency's buses struck a minivan near the Kendall Center at 4015 W. Wendover Ave. after the van exited the parking lot the wrong way.
GTA operates 16 routes seven days a week across Greensboro. The agency was established in 1991 when the city assumed control of a private bus system originally run by Duke Power Company since 1925, and is now governed by a nine-person advisory commission appointed by the Greensboro City Council.
The fire comes during a period of heightened scrutiny for the agency. GTA has faced an operator walkout that temporarily halted city service and sustained rider complaints about route changes affecting low-income neighborhoods. Until the agency discloses the bus's maintenance record and a timeline for any corrective action, riders on Route 1 have no assurance that Sunday's incident was an isolated mechanical failure rather than a signal of broader fleet concerns.
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