Transportation
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Its commission has approved installing three different types of electric vehicle charging pads this summer, at its Middletown base. The endeavor is part of its goal to be energy neutral by 2040.
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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.
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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.
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James Duckens most recently served as project director for the EDD’s Unemployment Insurance Modernization Project.
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Summoned with a simple tap on a smartphone, Uber also proved safer on average than cabs in more than a dozen test trips.
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The state is now reviewing the broker's license applications and the public has two weeks to make any protests, according to a spokeswoman for the DMV.
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Garbage trucks get as little as 3 miles per gallon, making them prime targets in cities’ efforts to trim costs and curb greenhouse gas pollution.
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A transportation panel presented a 73-page report to Gov. Mike Pence, which included a roadmap for furthering Indiana’s reputation as a crossroads state.
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Portland-area highways will display reader boards that rely on a series of sensors embedded in the road pavement and Bluetooth signals.
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A total of 31 new all-electric Ford Focus sedans will soon be humming down Sonoma County roads, thanks in part to a federal grant.
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The rules, which will be voted on July 18, are designed to regulate an industry that has already broken into the Minneapolis market without city approval.
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Structural monitoring utilizing highly accurate sensing devices can enable objective, precise and timely performance data on the condition of our nation's bridges.
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The autonomous truck project, called Mercedes-Benz Future Truck 2025, was demonstrated to around 300 members of the trucking press, along with German government officials, market analysts and others from more than 30 nations.
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The city’s Department of Street Services is pushing for an overhaul of the system, which could take 25 years and $200 million to accomplish.
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At last month's Republican state convention, delegates approved a platform less amenable to toll roads, and Attorney General Greg Abbott vowed to build more roads "without raising a single penny in taxes, fees or tolls."
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That’s what a growing number of cities are asking themselves -- Syracuse being the latest that may tear down its elevated urban expressway.
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After developing modeling tools to predict the impact of projected weather changes, Professor Paul Chinowsky is making sure infrastructure won't face expensive failures in 20 years.
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Auto insurers see an opportunity to fill in a gap with a new kind of policy or add-on that would cover drivers and passengers using ride-share technologies.
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Baltimore, Chicago, and Miami Beach, Fla., are joining San Francisco, Los Angeles, and Washington, D.C., as smart parking innovators.
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While the Public Utility Commission attempts to cling to a "Jurassic Age of transportation," Peduto says communities must adapt.
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In autonomous vehicles and other intelligent transportation systems, we may have a solution so powerful that we fail to pause and ask what problem such systems are best suited to solving.
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