Stertil-Koni has new technical support manager

Stertil-Koni, a leading company in heavy-duty vehicle lifts, especially for trucks and buses, named Matthew Murray to be its new technical support manager. Murray will be based at the North American headquarters of the company in Stevensville, Maryland. He has approximately 20 years of experience that includes project management, mechanical system testing and electrical controls. Read More »

Indiana slates hearings to discuss I-69 project near Indianapolis

Indiana transportation officials plan to hold a public hearing Thursday and next week to discuss a proposed infrastructure project on Interstate 69 in Hamilton and Madison counties in the Indianapolis area. The $85-million project is designed to improve and widen a 15-mile section of I-69 in both counties. The improvements are part of the Major Moves 2020 program in Indiana. Read More »

Michigan crews finish I-75 project in St. Ignace

Michigan Department Transportation crews finished pavement reconstruction on the Interstate 75 Business Loop (BL) in St. Ignace and repair work on the Castle Rock overpass, ending traffic restrictions in the section. The project repaired the railing, deck and substructure of the bridge and replaced the ramp aprons, pavement, gutters, guardrails and curbs on I-75. Read More »

Expansion joints replaced on I-5 Union Slough bridge in Washington

Construction crews recently finished work to fix roadway ruts and replace 10 aging bridge expansion joints on I-5’s Union Slough bridge near Everett, Washington. The project is part of an overall bridge preservation project that will replace 41 expansion joints on bridges located from Everett to Marysville, crossing over Steamboat, Union, and Ebey sloughs. Read More »

Jeffersonville, Indiana, gains TIGER grant for port improvements

The Port of Indiana - Jeffersonville received a $10-million federal Transportation Investment Generating Economic Recovery (TIGER) grant on Friday to complete truck-to-rail and rail-to-water improvements. The projects will link road, water and rail infrastructures at the port, which is located on the Ohio River directly across from Louisville, Kentucky. Read More »

Guidelines released for filing airline on-time reports in 2016

The Bureau of Transportation Statistics released guidelines for reporting on-time data from airlines throughout 2016. BTS estimates that it will be receiving reports of on-time data from 12 airlines during 2016. BTS said all airlines that have revenue exceeding 1 percent of the total scheduled-service domestic passenger revenue during the 12 months that ended June 30 must report. Read More »

U.S. mileage increases for 18th consecutive month

The Federal Highway Administration (FHWA) said Friday that drivers logged 277.3 billion miles on U.S. roads in August, posting the 18th straight month that mileage has increased. The FHWA released the data in its “Traffic Volume Trends” report for August. The report is a monthly estimate of road travel within the U.S. that was seasonally adjusted. Read More »

NTSB, public health professionals discuss alcohol, drugs and driving

National Transportation Safety Board (NTSB) representatives held a discussion session Monday on substance-impaired driving at the annual meeting of the American Public Health Association. "Impairment on our highways remains a preventable public health threat that kills thousands of Americans every year,” NTSB Vice Chairman Bella Dinh-Zarr said. “It is an epidemic on wheels.” Read More »

BTS publishes August North American freight numbers

The value of freight from US-NAFTA amounted to $92.4 billion, according to the Bureau of Transportation Statistics.. All of the various modes of transportation showed that they had carried less value of freight when compared to August 2014. Experts attribute the declines to the fall in prices for mineral fueling, not a decrease volume of freight that needs to be transported. Read More »

Seattle Department of Transportation requests feedback on their Pedestrian Master Plan

Seattle Department of Transportation is asking for its citizens' help and input on Pedestrian Master Plan. In 2009, Seattle announced a 20-year master plan to make Seattle the most walkable city in the nation. This plan is to help Seattle Department of Transportation improve walkability in the city. The short survey will be open for comments through the end of November. Read More »

Pedestrian safety project begins in Arizona

The Arizona Department of Transportation recently launched a new project, which will provide students and local residents with a new pedestrian hybrid beacon on State Route 86 in Sells, Arizona. The project, which is in collaboration with the Tohono O’odham Nation, will have crews install a crosswalk signal that will be activated by pedestrians. Completion is expected in January. Read More »

MTA approves capital program for 2015-2019

The $29-billion Capital Program will finance thousands of new train cars, subway cars, and buses. It also set aside an additional $2.8 billion to improve subway stations, instal countdown clocks at most of the subway stations, and finish the implementation of the Positive Train Control technology on the Long Island Rail Road (LIRR) and Metro-North Railroad. Read More »

Iowa DOT uses Waze Connected Citizens program

The Iowa Department of Transportation (DOT) announced it started its first phase with the Waze Connected Citizens program, which will help drivers access real-time traveler information through phones, websites, and mobile apps. The Waze data comes from the Waze mobile app that is gathered through crowd-sourced data from drivers who report on traffic disruptions. Read More »

Report outlines safety challenges being faced by pedestrians and bicyclists

The U.S. Department of Transportation (USDOT) released a report based on the efforts of over 1,500 people who were asked to walk or bicycle to conduct safety assessments. The report, titled "Pedestrian and Bicyclist Road Safety Assessments," showed a variety of factors that affect safety for pedestrians and bicyclists, such as physical barriers including missing crosswalks or missing curb cuts. Read More »

North Carolina county is avoiding strain of federal transportation funding uncertainty

While funding for federal transportation projects lurches from one short-term extension to the next, Henderson County, part of the metropolitan area of Ashville, North Carolina, has remained more or less unaffected by the lack of stability. “I am not aware of any direct impact of federal funding on current transportation projects in Henderson County,” County Commissioner Bill Laspley said.  Read More »

Denver forum wraps up series of meetings on Beyond Traffic report

Federal, state and local leaders met Tuesday in Denver, Colorado, for the last of 11 regional forums on the Beyond Traffic draft framework.Beyond Traffic, the U.S. Department of Transportation's draft framework for the future, is an outline of the challenges the transportation and infrastructure network will face in the next 30 years. Read More »

AAR weekly rail traffic report shows a drop from last year

The Association of American Railroads' most recent weekly report on U.S. rail traffic puts total traffic at 553,144 intermodal units and carloads for the week that ended Oct. 24, a decrease of 5.6 percent when compared to the same period in 2014. Total carloads amounted to 284,523, a decrease of 7.4 percent when compared to the same week from last year. Read More »

U.S. 2 reconstruction project completed in Michigan

Officials from the city of Ironwood and the Michigan Department of Transportation (MDOT) held a ribbon-cutting ceremony Monday for the reopening of U.S. 2 in Ironwood. The two-year $14.4-million project included lane widening, utility upgrades, construction of a center left-turn lane and sidewalks along U.S. 2, a major route connecting Michigan and Wisconsin. Read More »

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