Transportation
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The Illinois secretary of state is seeking to address a lack of clarity around rules for those transportation methods through a new educational campaign called “Ride Safe, Ride Smart, Ride Ready.”
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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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Four years after President Barack Obama declared high-speed rail a national priority, the financial hurdles seem higher than ever.
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Technology identifies potential commercial vehicle safety risks, allowing officers to stop the right trucks for a closer look.
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The law sets standards for insurance coverage, permitting and criminal background checks for the companies and their drivers.
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Two U.S. senators issued a statement saying that Congress needs to “assist innovators in bringing this new technology to our roads.”
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The $1.5 billion master-planned community will be one of the country's first to be built from the ground up with infrastructure for 5G.
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Major cities like San Jose are talking to folks involved in geofencing, while Denver is already using geofencing for dockless scooters.
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The New York City Council has approved a yearlong pause on new licenses for ride-hailing companies.
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According to authorities, the car-mounted cameras have already helped with law enforcement efforts.
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No-cost app development and rampant replication sounds like a civic tech pipe dream, but one organization is making it a reality.
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Autonomous cars need to learn how to drive just like people do: with real-world practice on public roads. It's key to safety, and to public confidence in the new technologies.
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Mayors from San Francisco, San Jose and Oakland discuss their stand on these technologies during Nextdoor’s first annual Mayor Summit.
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The city will run a year-long trial where planners will measure the various impacts from the bike lanes before deciding whether the lanes will become permanent.
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Councilmember Kerry McCormack is looking into app technology as an avenue to improve Cleveland's troubled downtown parking.
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City officials updated the rules that had prevented the company from operating in the city for three years, but an exact launch date remains unknown.
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By fall, a 12-month pilot program with Cap Metro could have six driverless shuttles bustling around downtown Austin.
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“Our focus is always on providing safe, reliable and efficient transportation services,” says a Las Vegas spokesman.
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General Motors will soon hire 10 cybersecurity pros to help find flaws in any of its cars' systems.
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When drones help police reconstruct crash scenes, roads reopen more quickly.