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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A compromise currently being crafted by the city council would likely bring more scooters to town.
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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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The proposal wants to jump-start an Ohio economy that has been idle for decades in economic, population and wage growth as well as household income and poverty.
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The app made for PennDOT's Innovations Challenge would incorporate advertising from businesses offering coupons and incentives as rewards for safe driving.
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Gov. Mark Dayton opposed the bill for lacking funding to fix the MNLARS computer system and also criticized where the $9 million was coming from.
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Like NYC's Citi Bike program, Suffolk residents with the Zagster app will be able to pick up and drop off bikes at docks placed throughout the county.
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The Bridge SF conference embraced startups this year. Here's a sampling of them.
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Minnesota's new online vehicle license and registration system has reduced its backlog, but improvements remain to be completed, state IT and public safety officials told lawmakers.
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The city wants to impose some restrictions on bikeshare companies that the startups say will hamper their ability do deliver service.
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The drones will be part of a three-year project that will complement automated and connected vehicle testing along the 33 Smart Mobility Corridor.
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New traffic signals in Detroit are designed to help pedestrians, cyclists and ambulances get through intersections, while helping traffic planners test safety improvements quickly.
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Rather than obeying the order to remove dockless scooters from public streets and sidewalks, two companies are hoping the city will come around.
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The city and county of Honolulu becomes the first government agency in the nation to pass a bill that caps fares charged by ridesharing services.
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In Idaho, a local police department has turned to electric-assist bicycles to help officers do their job.
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Biking apps like Ride Report and Strava are being used by transportation planners to determine where biking infrastructure should be focused.
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The company, spun out of Google, will multiply its driverless fleet size with Chrysler Pacificas.
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The company is racing against several other players in the self-driving automotive space to put vehicles into commercial operation.
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The California Energy Commission awarded nearly $1.8 million in funding from the Alternative and Renewable Fuel and Vehicle Technology Program to nine cities and organizations to develop strategic plans for electric vehicle charging infrastructure.
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