METRO Magazine Logo
MenuMENU
SearchSEARCH

2016 Women in Transportation: Victoria Learn

Learn's main focus is ensuring that all buses are kept up to FTA standards, as well as employee and public safety, which she considers to be her biggest responsibility.

by Kelsey Nolan
September 15, 2016
2016 Women in Transportation: Victoria Learn

 

At IndyGo, Learn’s main focus is ensuring employee and public safety and that all buses are kept up to FTA standards.

3 min to read


Victoria “Vicki” Learn, director, maintenance, for IndyGo in Indianapolis thought she was going to work with animals when she originally laid out her career trajectory. That was until a friend offered her a position running parts for Wayne’s Frame and Body in Gary, Ind. It was here she realized she could create an opportunity for herself.

Victoria “Vicki” Learn, director, maintenance, for IndyGo in Indianapolis thought she was going to work with animals when she originally laid out her career trajectory. That was until a friend offered her a position running parts for Wayne’s Frame and Body in Gary, Ind. It was here she realized she could create an opportunity for herself.

“As a parts driver, I was making about 40-50 cents more an hour than I was as a veterinary’s assistant. Seemed like a lot back in the eighties,” she explains.

Ad Loading...

Learn then spent five years learning the trade and purchasing parts for the company, until she was recruited by Phelps Holdings, owner of American Truck Parts. She eventually became the purchasing manager at their headquarters in Portage, Ind. In 2010, Learn moved into the director, maintenance, position with IndyGo, giving her about 30 years in the aftermarket sector.

Her main focus is ensuring that all buses are kept up to FTA standards, as well as employee and public safety, which she considers to be her biggest responsibility. She also writes all maintenance and bus-related RFP’s. With around 100 employees she manages, she also runs a parts warehouse with approximately $3.5 million in inventory.

To date, Learn has accomplished many feats for IndyGo, including writing the RFP for remanufactured, fully-electric Complete Coach Works buses, with the help of a $10 million TIGER grant the organization received in 2013. Because the technology for electric buses was relatively untested in 2013, Learn championed that launch, and the buses were officially put into service last year. It was a risky move, Learn explains, and IndyGo is one of the biggest organizations to implement this type of technology, but other agencies are catching up. “It was definitely being on the bleeding edge rather than the cutting edge,” she says.

Learn is also currently part of the APTA Zero Emission Bus (ZEB) Group, helping to create the standards for zero emission buses and taking this new technology she advocated for forward.

Learn has expressed that living up to the public’s expectations is difficult, especially with 22 service hours a day and a 20% spare ratio, but the people she serves makes her job worth it.

Ad Loading...

“Transit is a great equalizer. On any bus at any given time you might find an executive and a warehouse clerk, both commuting. Some have a choice while others don’t. But both people are equally as important to their families who rely on their support. Transit provides equal dignity to both,” she says.

As a person who prides herself on both her attention to detail, and the compassion she brings to her staff, she feels this balance is what has helped her get to where she is.

“Compassion is a tricky thing as some feel you might be playing favorites, but hopefully, the other person never has to go through the same thing, whatever the issue is at that time,” Learn says.

Currently, Learn is writing a new RFP for the new all-electric BRT buses that will be launching in early 2018. The Red Line will be IndyGo’s first BRT line and it is a very exciting time for transit and IndyGo. The 60-foot buses are being designed from the ground up, including all the amenities anyone could want while traveling to work, such as Wi-Fi and USB charging ports for electronic devices, along with a new thought process for the interior design of the bus.

When she’s not working, Learn is playing with her rescue cats and dog and attending WNBA games. She supports the Indianapolis Fever because they work so hard and still only earn about 1/16th of what male athletes earn, she explains. She also helps with the Catch The Stars Foundation, a literacy, mentoring and fitness organization for children, run by four-time Olympic athlete and WNBA Champion, Indiana Fever’s Tamika Catchings.

Subscribe to Our Newsletter

More Management

Two Swedish public transit buses next to a Hitachi Energy infrastructure.
Managementby Elora HaynesMay 11, 2026

When the Buses Are Ready, and the System Isn’t

Transit agencies have moved past pilot projects, but scaling electrification is exposing a harder truth: the real challenge isn’t vehicles, it’s everything around them.

Read More →
Local, Federal, State, and LA Metro officials at the opening of the D Line.
Railby StaffMay 10, 2026

LA Metro Opens D Line Extension

The only new subway opening in the US this year, the D Line Extension represents one of Metro’s top transit priorities and a historic milestone for Los Angeles, with Sections 2 and 3 set to open in 2027.

Read More →
Cover for Part 2 with AC Transit's Cecil Blandon
ManagementMay 8, 2026

Bus Tech Talk: Part 2 with AC Transit's Cecil Blandon

In Part 2 of a two-part conversation, AC Transit’s director of maintenance joins co-hosts Alex Roman and Mark Hollenbeck to discuss his maintenance team’s work with various types of vehicle, training, augmented reality, and more.

Read More →
Ad Loading...
A Société de transport de Montréal transit bus driving past a grassy area with trees.
Managementby StaffMay 8, 2026

Montreal’s STM Reports Ridership Decline, Service Modernization Efforts

The transit agency cites labor disruptions, demographic shifts, and evolving rider needs as it advances safety initiatives, paratransit changes, and major infrastructure projects across its network.

Read More →
Maintenance officials examining a vehicle on a lift.
Managementby Alex RomanMay 8, 2026

Avoiding Mid-Season Breakdowns: A Fleet Readiness Q&A

John Hatman, COO of Master’s Transportation, breaks down the priorities, warning signs and common mistakes fleet managers should address now to stay ahead of summer demand.

Read More →
A vintage TTC sign against a blue cloudy sky.
Managementby StaffMay 7, 2026

TTC Launches New Wayfinding Pilot, Announces Fare Capping Ahead of FIFA World Cup 2026

See how the TTC is testing a new wayfinding system at major subway stations while planning to introduce fare capping to make transit easier to navigate and more affordable for riders.

Read More →
Ad Loading...
PATCO's New Control Center
Managementby StaffMay 7, 2026

PATCO Opens New Operations Control Center

The new center serves as the central hub for monitoring and managing PATCO train operations, communications, customer service coordination, incident response, and overall operational oversight across the transit system.

Read More →
VIA Rail Canada logo
Railby StaffMay 7, 2026

VIA Rail reports Stable Ridership, Rising Revenue Amid Ongoing Challenges

Despite these pressures, VIA Rail is reporting that total revenues increased to $514.8 million as more travelers took advantage of the wide range of options available through the corporation’s new reservation system.

Read More →
SEPTA's advertisement for multi-rider feature.
Technologyby StaffMay 7, 2026

Philadelphia's SEPTA Introduces Multi-Rider Feature for Contactless Payments

Up until now, this feature was only available when using a SEPTA Key card.

Read More →
Ad Loading...
Books with graduation mortar board
Managementby StaffMay 6, 2026

New Chicago Scholarship Program Targets Student Pathways to Construction Careers

Created in partnership with Walsh-VINCI Transit Community Partners, the contractor for CTA’s historic $5.7 billion RLE project, the new $250,000 scholarship program will provide three students a year from 2026 to 2030 with $3,000 scholarships.

Read More →