Public Transit

  April 4, 2011, 9:29 am

Pipeline initiative expected this week

By Keith Laing

Transportation Secretary Ray LaHood will kick off the week with a trip Monday to Allentown, Pa., when Department of Transportation officials say he will shine a light on pipeline safety.

LaHood will take a tour of the site of a February explosion that resulted in five deaths and will make what officials are calling a “major announcement” about safety initiatives from the Obama administration.

The Transportation Department's Pipeline and Hazardous Materials Safety administrator, Cynthia Quarterman; Rep. Charlie Dent (R-Pa.); Allentown Mayor Ed Palowski; and the city’s fire chief, Robert Scheier, will join LaHood.

Read more...
Archived under: Infrastructure, Security, Highways, Bridges and Roads, Public Transit
comment Comments
E-mail Print share
  April 1, 2011, 9:00 am

News bites: Texas-sized transportation problems in the Lone Star state

By Keith Laing

Your morning transportation speed-read:

Texas needs to step on the gas with its transportation funding, a new report finds.

San Francisco is mapping out its plan for moving people around during the America's Cup yachting tournament.

A Chicago casino is betting on a bridge to Indiana the state of Illinois said it wasn't planning to replace.

Ohio looking to the private sector for transportation funding.

Archived under: Highways, Bridges and Roads, Public Transit
comment Comments
E-mail Print share
  March 30, 2011, 6:45 pm

New Jersey bus crash company's operations suspended

By Keith Laing

The charter of the company that operated the bus involved in a fatal New Jersey crash has been suspended, the Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration announced Wednesday afternoon.

The FMCSA suspended the operating charter of the company, Pennsylvania-based Super Luxury Tours, which prohibits the company from operating interstate.

"Safety is our number one priority,” FMCSA Administrator Anne Ferro said in a statement. “FMCSA will use every available resource to pursue and shut down passenger bus companies that evade federal safety regulations and put motorists at risk.”

The announcement came in the middle of a Senate hearing into the issue of bus safety spurred by the Super Luxury Tours accident, which killed two people, and a crash involving a bus carrying senior citizens on the way to New York City from a Connecticut casino. In that accident, which took place in the Bronx, N.Y., 15 people were killed and 17 more were injured.

Senate Commerce, Science, and Transportation Committee's Surface Transportation subcommittee Chairman Sen. Frank Lautenberg (D-N.J.) said those accidents were why Congress needed to be involved in the issue.

“We owe it to all of the victims of bus accidents and their families to get to the bottom of why these crashes happened — and to do everything in our power to prevent crashes from happening in the future," he said. "We need to understand why these dangerous drivers and bus companies were not taken off the road before these disasters."

Read more...
Archived under: Public Transit
comment Comments
E-mail Print share
  March 30, 2011, 11:35 am

DOT to require learner's permits for bus drivers

By Keith Laing

Transportation Secretary Ray LaHood said Wednesday that new bus drivers would soon be required to get learner's permits before they can obtain commercial driver's licenses.
 
The announcement comes as a congressional committee is set to convene hearings on bus safety later Wednesday following two deadly bus accidents in New York and New Jersey that killed 17 people.
 
The Senate Commerce, Science and Transportation panel’s Surface Transportation subcommittee is scheduled to hear from the National Transportation Safety Board (NTSB), the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA) and others.

Read more...
Archived under: Public Transit
comment Comments
E-mail Print share
  March 30, 2011, 10:21 am

Calif. would use Fla. rail money to extend train there

By Keith Laing

California would use the $2.4 billion in high-speed rail money that was rejected by Florida to extends its proposed railway, officials announced this week.  

The California High-Speed Rail Authority plans to ask the Department of Transportation (DOT) for at least half of the unused Florida rail money to extend its railway to downtown Bakersfield, Calif., The Bakersfield Californian reported Wednesday.

When the initial DOT rail grants were announced, only California topped Florida's $2.4 billion takeaway. Now that Florida Gov. Rick Scott (R) has rejected that money, California wants an even bigger piece of the pie. 

Read more...
Archived under: Railroads, Public Transit
comment Comments
E-mail Print share
  March 30, 2011, 9:00 am

News bites: Wrangling in Atlanta over transportation wish-lists

By Keith Laing

Atlanta Mayor Kasim Reed is fighting with his City Council over transportation projects they should ask voters to approve next year.

North Carolina got its high-speed rail from the federal government, but the plan is far from a done deal.

A Texas trucker was found in Mississippi to be carrying a bigger load than initially met the eye.

Sen. Dick Durbin (D-Ill.) asks Transportation Secretary Ray LaHood to protect their mutual home state's transportation dollars.

Archived under: Railroads, Highways, Bridges and Roads, Public Transit, Shipping and Cargo
comment Comments
E-mail Print share
  March 29, 2011, 9:00 am

News bites: Motor City bridges in as bad shape as Detroit economy

By Keith Laing

Detroit's problems are well-documented, but its bridges being 13th worst in the nation can be added to the list.

Arizona officials approved a comprehensive rail plan, but they didn't say how they planned to pay for it.

Commuters in Maryland are going out of their way to avoid tolls.

Washington state officials want studded tires off the road for spring, but spring hasn't started there yet.

Archived under: Railroads, Highways, Bridges and Roads, Public Transit
comment Comments
E-mail Print share
  March 28, 2011, 2:09 pm

Conservatives in favor of high-speed rail plan Virginia event

By Keith Laing

With GOP opposition to President Obama’s high-speed rail investments on the rise, a group of conservative supporters of the proposed railways are seeking to change the course of the discussion about railways.

The Southeast High Speed Rail Association will hold an event called "The Conservative Case for Intercity & Higher Speed Passenger Rail” on March 30 in Richmond, Va. The featured speaker will be William Lind, director of the American Conservative Center for Public Transportation.

Lind co-wrote a book in 2009 called Moving Minds: Conservatives and Public Transportation.

Read more...
Archived under: Railroads, Public Transit
comment Comments
E-mail Print share
  March 28, 2011, 2:07 pm

Bus safety panel set

By Keith Laing

Members of Congress will hear from the National Transportation Safety Board (NTSB), the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA) and others this week when it takes up the issue of bus safety.
 
Sen. Frank Lautenberg (D-N.J.), chairman of the Senate Commerce, Science and Transportation panel’s subcommittee on surface transportation, on Monday announced the panelists for the March 30 hearing.
 
The meeting follows two fatal bus crashes in New York and New Jersey this month that killed 17 people.

Read more...
Archived under: Public Transit
comment Comments
E-mail Print share
  March 28, 2011, 11:31 am

DC cabs to add gas surcharge

By Keith Laing

Hailing a taxicab from K Street to Capitol Hill will now cost a $1 more than it used to thanks to an executive order signed over the weekend by Washington Mayor Vincent Gray.
 
The order allows cabs to tack on a surcharge in order to offset rising gas prices, beginning Monday morning. 
 
Gray's office said in a statement he is following a recommendation from the D.C. Taxicab Commission, which regulates cab rides in the nation's capital.
 
The surcharge is scheduled to last until July 25, though the taxicab commission could repeal it before then.

Read more...
Archived under: Public Transit
comment Comments
E-mail Print share
 
« Start< Prev3132333435363738Next >End »
 

More Videos »

Transportation Report Twitter - Click to follow
More From The Web
bloglogo

More Briefing Room »

More Congress Blog »

More Pundits Blog »

More Twitter Room »

More Hillicon Valley »

More E2-Wire (Energy) »

More Ballot Box »

More On The Money »

More Healthwatch »

More Floor Action »

More Transportation »

More DEFCON Hill »

More Global Affairs »

More In The Know »

More RegWatch »

Get latest news from The Hill direct to your inbox, RSS reader and mobile devices.