1 to 10 of 60 | Next | Last |
A BRT project along a major thoroughfare in Cleveland -- the Cleveland Healthline -- has already generated $5.8 billion in development, or $114 for each transit dollar invested. By comparison, the Blue Line, a light rail project in Portland, OR, has generated just $3.74 per dollar invested, according to reports.
The Federal Transit Administration establishes a multi-faceted Expedited Public Transportation Improvement Initiative -- a.k.a., XPEDITE -- and solicits participation in a forthcoming online dialogue on the initiative. The goal of XPEDITE is to facilitate the transit industr...
The project envisions a new location-based information access system, one that provides personalized information to each user regardless of possible sensorial or cognitive impairments, with the goal of potentially increasing ridership to large segments of the community who are currently unable or unwilling to travel independently.
HUD Secretary Julian Castro arrives in Gulfport, MS bearing a big gift for the Mississippi Development Authority -- a three-year reprieve on a promise by the authority to provide 1,300 jobs by the port expansion’s completion.
Research emerging from an initiative sponsored by Federal Transit Administration resullts in a series of bold recommendations for changing federal requirements that apply to mobility assistance devices used by transit operators to accommodate people in wheelchairs.
USDA Secretary Tom Vilsack says the intent of the tool is to provide “a 'one-stop' source for accessing critical documents, databases, onsite electronic monitoring devices and geospatial information …to help keep the public safe and protect infrastructure."
Long-awaited by King Cove residents, the road will provide reliable and safe transportation needed to medevac seriously ill or injured patients during frequent periods of harsh weather when travel by plane or boat is too dangerous.
The House has overwhelmingly passed HR 720 and HR 719 -- legislation designed to bolster security at airports and provide oversight of the Transportation Security Administration’s Office of Inspection.
In fiscal year 2013, the Department of Transportation provided about $50 billion to states and other grantees (such as metropolitan planning organizations and transit agencies) to support highway and transit infrastructure and safety. However, it is not clear if this funding has improved system performance because, in part, these programs have lacked links to performance and national goals.
The Interior Department is proposing revisions to tribal transportation regulations to comply with the national surface transportation law known as Moving Ahead for Progress in the 21st Century, or MAP-21, as extended.
1 to 10 of 60 | Next | Last |