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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Flexibility, public engagement and predictability help attract outside money for infrastructure, experts say.
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The app was piloted in San Francisco, but in a city where it's believed that tech can cure the failings of government, the wait list ballooned.
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Supporters say red light cameras are proven to reduce traffic accidents, but opponents see them as little more than municipal cash grabs.
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The Internet company says it has no immediate plans to sell the cars, but decided to contract with an unnamed manufacturer to build up to 100 prototypes of its own design.
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After Takei plugged Scott and Julie Brusaw's idea for transforming roads, sidewalks and parking lots into solar surfaces, the couple saw their crowdfunding campaign pass the $1 million goal.
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Initially, cities across the country offered free use of their charging stations, but more are moving toward a pay model to recoup maintenance and electricity costs.
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The tiny plastic chips embedded in passports and credit cards are making consumers and travelers uneasy about the potential for someone with prying eyes trying to steal their personal data.
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Although law enforcement officials say the data collection is invaluable, such databases are also being built by private firms, which can sell access to anyone willing to pay.
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At its core, the case states that the services should operate under the same tight regulations that the rest of the taxi and limousine industry does.
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Uber’s debut in Annapolis comes at a tumultuous time in the relationship between the city’s cab drivers and the Department of Transportation, as well as between Uber and the state’s regulatory agency.
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Los Angeles and San Francisco are jumping into variable-rate parking in a big way.
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Texas ranked as the 10th most dangerous state for walking commuters, with nearly 4,200 pedestrian deaths between 2003 and 2012.
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A bill approved 10-1 by the Ohio House Transportation, Public Safety and Homeland Security Committee aims to make it easier for Ohio residents to travel between the U.S. and Canada or Mexico.
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As the Sonoma-Marin Area Rail Transit builds the tracks for commuter service, businesses along the line are upset at losing direct access to freight service, which can increase property values and save shipping costs.
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An Illinois state senator is pushing legislation that would outlaw using Google Glass-like devices behind the wheel, on the argument that it's a potentially deadly distraction.
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Customers converting vehicles to compressed natural gas would be required to give up a portion of the 50 percent state tax credit they are eligible to receive so that money can go to the Labor Department to pay for the new oversight.
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The Michigan Mobility Transformation Center will be built like a movie set and feature mechanized pedestrians, construction areas and other obstacles to test new technologies that could save lives on the road.
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Now that the cash-strapped Port Authority of Allegheny County, Pa., has more funding through the state's new transportation law, recommendations of improvement were offered as part of a week-long study of the transit agency,
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