Transportation
-
The CEO of CHAMP Titles — which recently raised $55 million — talks about where the industry is headed. His optimism about upcoming significant growth is matched by another executive from this field.
-
The city’s tourist-heavy Oceanfront neighborhood is using a digital parking solution from eleven-x to improve parking management and grow revenue in its “resort area.” Area residents will get parking credits.
-
The Hawaii Department of Transportation has launched its Eyes on the Road project, which leverages dashcams in private and state-owned vehicles to gather vast amounts of information on roadway conditions.
More Stories
-
The New York DOT is launching a two-year, data-driven pilot program in an attempt to reduce vehicle ownership and free up precious parking spaces.
-
A lawsuit last year about an obscure provision of the company’s customer agreement that required all disputes to be resolved by an arbitrator and barred class-action complaints was overturned, reinstating the arbitration provision.
-
Residents can help determine what type of transit they'd most like to see along the busiest routes.
-
Under the state's Right-to-Know Law, records are presumed public in Pennsylvania.
-
For the revolution to succeed, smart regulators and thoughtful entrepreneurs will need to work together.
-
Transit officials there are nearing the end of a one-year pilot program that could reinvent paratransit services.
-
Mainstream analysts have assumed adoption of fully autonomous vehicles will take much longer, despite predictions by entrepreneurs such as Elon Musk that they are just around the corner.
-
And if so, will people trust them?
-
In addition to trouble with changes to the law, significant technology investments are required to create a registry and conduct background checks on all drivers.
-
Since the tolls are electronic, this can mean extra fees for out-of-town drivers in rental cars.
-
Canadian officials were able to recover the flight data recorder information from the botched landing at SFO, but the voice recorder had long been overwritten.
-
The responsibility for implementing the $836 million emergency plan to restore the broken system falls to transportation veterans Veronique Hakim and Pat Foye.
-
The project will deploy 300 smart boots over the next year. If it is successful, LADOT will increase the number of smart boots deployed citywide.
-
Backed by the two companies, the bill would allow ride-hailing drivers to get a single license to work statewide rather than having to purchase one in every city they pick up, drop off or drive through.
-
The Potomac Highlands Airport Authority voted unanimously to fund a portion of a feasibility study for the center.
-
New York Rep. Daniel Donovan said he won't support a return to a two-way toll until he's convinced it won't negatively affect traffic and tolls.
-
Residents and local officials have cried foul over not being notified of the project to deliver Wi-Fi service to commuter rail riders by installing 320 monopole towers — each 74 feet high — along the North of Boston rail lines.
-
The legislation will now go to the full House for consideration.
Most Read