Transportation
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Aided by federal funding, the state Department of Transportation will seek proposals this spring from businesses willing to install public electric vehicle chargers, with its financial assistance.
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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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Which cities’ residents are most active at reporting roadway potholes and other public nuisances?
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Going forward with construction an “immense risk,” new report says.
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‘Solar paint’ applied to conductive surface produces electricity, although further research is needed before it becomes a commercially viable product.
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First pilot project scheduled for a campus transit bus in 2012.
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A new application from Wayne County, Mich., shows which roads have been cleared, improving safety and giving drivers the ability to plot alternative routes.
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New two-megawatt solar farm will generate power for about 260 homes in the city starting next year.
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The National Transportation Safety Board wants all 50 states and the District of Columbia to ban drivers’ “nonemergency use of portable electronic devices” except for in-car GPS navigation.
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Interstate 95 will now feature seven locations of overhead travel times to destinations for motorists.
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Mayor Scott W. Lang shares his account of how sustainable technology is proving to be an economic and environmental boon for his city.
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How will U.S. carmakers double vehicles’ miles per gallon in the next 12 years? There’s no big solution — but there are lots of little ones.
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Security vendors weigh in on the seriousness of the issue and what can be done to protect critical infrastructure systems.
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Companies have become masters of disaster as they’ve endured every type of emergency and learned lessons along the way.
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Massachusetts Institute of Technology researchers develop mobile scanning process that identifies savings from correcting heat loss in buildings.
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The Turlock, Calif., Irrigation District and law enforcement have located stolen vehicles from the district’s fleet with the assistance of fleet management technology.
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The airports are replacing their identification card reader systems and prepping security infrastructure for an eventual upgrade to biometric-based identification.
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Recycled streets are paving the way to savings in the capital of Silicon Valley.
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Faced with modernizing a vital project management system, the Indiana Department of Transportation leaned heavily on existing staff.
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