Maryland DOT Helps Seal Regional Commuter Rail Deal

The Maryland Transit Administration (MTA) – a division of the Maryland Department of Transportation – and Virginia Railway Express (VRE) recently forged a new agreement that allows rail commuters with a weekly, monthly, or 10-trip tickets purchased on either the Maryland Area Rail Commuter (MARC) or VRE system to transfer at Union Station in Washington, D.C., to the other system (MARC-to-VRE or VRE-to-MARC) at no additional cost.

[Above photo by VRE]

“This agreement represents a significant step forward in regional transit integration,” said MTA Administrator Holly Arnold in a statement. “We are not only fostering a more connected and efficient transportation network across our states but fueling economic growth by facilitating easier movement of people, supporting tourism and attracting business to the National Capital Region.”

This new “cross-honor program” enables travelers to seamlessly transfer between MARC and VRE trains on one ticket; simplifying travel logistics and promoting greater accessibility and affordability for the region’s commuters.

 It also underscores the commitment of Virginia, Washington, D.C., and Maryland to prioritize the needs of commuters and shape the future of regional mobility, noted VRE CEO Rich Dalton.

“This agreement effectively expands the geographic footprint of commuter rail service in the region and provides passengers with an affordable two-seat ride across state lines,” he said.

“It lays the groundwork for future efforts to better align MARC and VRE operations, which is consistent with our long-range plan to grow VRE from a peak-period, commuter-focused rail service to an all-day, bi-directional transit system that can better meet the transportation needs of a growing region,” Dalton added.

With this new program, MTA and VRE said rail commuters will gain easier access to connections between major National Capital Region urban centers, along with greater flexibility offered by the multiple transportation options available at Union Station.

Caltrans Unveils Transportation Project Prioritization Tool

The California Department of Transportation – known as Caltrans – recently unveiled a new tool designed to prioritize transportation projects that further California’s climate, safety, and equity goals in relation to state and federal grant applications.

[Above image by Caltrans]

The agency said the new Caltrans System Investment Strategy or CSIS updates the project evaluation and nomination process to better identify and promote multimodal climate-friendly projects in funding decisions.

The new tool fulfills a key action in the state’s Climate Action Plan for Transportation Infrastructure or CAPTI, said Caltrans, which calls for a data- and performance-driven investment strategy to more effectively align state and federal grant applications for transportation projects with the state’s ambitious climate goals.

Photo by Caltrans

“Deploying this forward-thinking and progressive investment strategy will not only significantly reduce our carbon footprint but provide a tool to vastly improve the safety, equity, and accessibility of our highway system,” explained Tony Tavares, director of Caltrans, in a statement.

Caltrans noted that this new analytical tool includes nine quantitative and two qualitative metrics to evaluate projects.

Quantitative metrics include safety, vehicle miles traveled, accessibility, the effect on disadvantaged communities, land usage, improvements to bicycle and pedestrian infrastructure, improvements to zero-emission vehicle infrastructure, and improvements to freight movement, while qualitative metrics include climate resilience and public engagement.

Caltrans added that it plans to use its new Equity Index tool, introduced in March, along with its new CSIS as part of the agency’s climate, safety, and equity goal alignment process for transportation projects.

Illinois DOT Helps Change Rail Line to Multiuse Path

The Illinois Department of Transportation recently outlined in a blog post how it helped transform an old railroad line and bridge in the city of Dixon, IL, into a trail for pedestrians, bicyclists, and other active transportation users.

[Above photo by the Illinois DOT]

The last train using the old Illinois Central Railroad line that once ran through the heart of Dixon rolled through the town in 1985. In 2016, the municipality began planning the conversion of that rail line into a multi-use trail with a combination of state and local funds as well as $3.4 million in federal funds disbursed by the Illinois DOT.

Photo by Illinois DOT

The initial phase of the project converted part of the line from Illinois DOT’s District 2 headquarters on Depot Avenue to Dixon’s downtown at Peoria Avenue and the Rock River. That initial $4.3 million project phase converted the rail line running over three stone arch bridges – listed on the National Register of Historic Places and rehabilitated in 1999 – to a lighted pedestrian and bicycle path that also features emergency call boxes for additional user safety. Approaching downtown, the trail leaves the rail line area via a graded wooden boardwalk designed to withstand the impact of Illinois winters.

The city also received $4 million in additional federal funding for remediation and environmental work at the old Dixon Iron and Metal Co., where the ramp from the old railroad connects with the riverfront trail at an area called Viaduct Point.

This project completes another phase of the Dixon Riverfront Masterplan, which had its conceptual beginnings more than 20 years ago, by helping complete Dixon’s Heritage Crossing Riverfront Plaza in which this path ties into.

The next phase of the project – called “Project Rock” and made possible through a $12 million federal Rebuilding American Infrastructure with Sustainability and Equity or “RAISE” grant – should start this fall and will extend the trail across the Rock River into Page Park. The city’s leadership also hopes the trail could eventually extend to the south end where it can connect with future parkland and Dixon’s gateway shopping area.

Other state departments of transportation are helping with similar locally-driven active transportation projects around the country.

Image by Utah DOT

For example, in May, the Utah Department of Transportation recently issued nearly $95 million to support 19 trail projects – including the construction of new paved trails as well as funding for planning efforts to fill in existing trail gaps – as part of creating a regional “Utah Trail Network” across the state.

The agency said that it collaborated with communities statewide regarding the allocation of that funding – approved by the Utah Transportation Commission – to select the key projects for this statewide trail network.

Of the projects selected for that inaugural round of funding, Utah DOT said 13 are considered construction ready and could get underway as soon as 2025 – depending on contractor schedules, supply availability and other factors like weather.

Additionally, in 2023, the Rhode Island Department of Transportation helped support – in concert with various federal, state, and local agencies – the new “Gotham Greens” off-road multi-use path along the Woonasquatucket River Greenway via stormwater mitigation efforts.

This new path, located behind the Gotham Greens building in Olneyville, offers new access to the Woonasquatucket River and serves as a connector between the Greenway and the Washington Secondary Bike Path – helping “knit together” a “patchwork of pathways” in the City of Providence to promote active transportation use while protecting the local environment from stormwater flooding.

Environmental News Highlights – August 14, 2024

FEDERAL ACTION

Rail Resiliency Bulletin July 2024 –FRA


Court rules against LNG terminal and pipeline project at Port of Brownsville, TX -Border Report/KMID-TV

Leveraging Active Transportation to Meet State Carbon Reduction and Climate Goals -Rails to Trails Conservancy

 

INFRASTRUCTURE RESILIENCE AND SUSTAINABILITY

Congestion pricing is indefinitely ‘on pause.’ NYC doesn’t have a backup plan to meet climate goals. -City & State New York

E-Bikes Discount Program Launched to Boost Sustainable Transportation in Boston -Beacon Hill Times

Growing crops for fuel is not a climate solution. Sustainable agricultural practices aren’t going to change that. -Earth Justice (commentary)

Michigan DOT announces grants to support critical maritime infrastructure projects -Michigan DOT (media release)

 

ELECTRIC VEHICLES, INFRASTRUCTURE AND POLICIES

Oklahoma DOT asks for your input on EV infrastructure plan -KSWO-TV

Getting Appalachian Airports Ready for Electric Aircraft -Plane & Pilot



Bad data is souring the EV-charging experience. Here’s how to fix it. -Canary News

Workplace Charging Webinars -Best Workplaces for Commuters

AIR QUALITY

Can Clean Hydrogen Fuel a Clean Energy Future? -World Resources Institute

Critics push back on proposal to end NC car emission inspections -Port City Daily

Much of the urban forest is scattered in back yards and that’s a climate challenge –Anthropocene

ENVIRONMENTAL JUSTICE/EQUITY

Public transportation is solution to climate crisis in Black communities -Florida Courier (commentary)

NATURAL RESOURCES

Baltimore harbor gains “floating wetlands” and a hint of its marshy past -Bay Journal

Severe storms and flooding? Mayor Adams has a drone for that. –Gothamist

Mimicking beaver dams, tackling invasive plants, and preventing harmful algae blooms with Ecology funding -State of Washington Department of Ecology (media release)

CULTURAL RESOURCES

Los Angeles Olympic venues will only be accessible by public transportation -AP

HEALTH AND HUMAN ENVIRONMENT/ACTIVE TRANSPORTATION

Rutland, Vermont Adds Bike Bridge To Growing Trail Network -WCAX-TV

SCDOT seeks public input on East Coast Greenway expansion -WCSC-TV

More Bostonians are biking as bike lanes boom, but barriers remain -Boston Globe

Dayton looks to maintain ‘Bike Friendly’ status, seeks community input

Dayton looks to maintain ‘Bike Friendly’ status, seeks community input -Spectrum News 1


Denver considering plan to add hundreds of miles of bike lanes -KUSA-TV


Michigan opens thousands of miles of trails to e-bikes with new policy -Bridge Michigan

TRB RESOURCES/RESEARCH/ANNOUNCEMENTS

Reviving the Los Angeles River: Engineering Alongside Nature and Society -National Academies


New CEQ Regulations Effects on Transportation Industry -TRB


Mitigate Tree Obstructions Near Airports -TRB (webinar)

Climate Change Impacts on the Seismic Performance of Bridges -TRB (webinar)

Optimizing green and gray infrastructure planning for sustainable urban development -npj Urban Sustainability


Cars and Chargers in the Country: Rural PEV Owner Accounts of Charging and Travel in California -The University of California Institute of Transportation Studies

FEDERAL REGISTER NOTICES

Notice of Meeting of the National Parks Overflights Advisory GroupFAA (Notice of meeting)

New NCDOT Signal Policy Boosts Pedestrian Safety

The North Carolina Department of Transportation recently adopted a new traffic signal policy that aims to boost pedestrian safety.

[Above photo by NCDOT]

The new NCDOT policy states that, as new traffic signals are installed or existing ones are upgraded, they will be programmed with what is called a “leading pedestrian interval​” or LPI. That technology is designed to give pedestrians a “head start” of three to seven seconds in marked crosswalks before motorists on the parallel direction get a green light. This interval allows pedestrians to better establish themselves in the crosswalk to drivers who must yield to them before making a left or right turn.

“This change makes pedestrians more visible for drivers,” explained Nick Zinser, NCDOT’s Western Region signals engineer, in a statement. “It’s a safety enhancement, and it can be done at a low cost by reprogramming the existing equipment at our traffic signals.”

[Editor’s note: A new study from the Insurance Institute for Highway Safety or IIHS indicates that, in areas with few streetlights, motorists are more than three times as likely to yield to pedestrians at illuminated crosswalks versus non-lighted ones.]

LPI use is already common in the downtowns of the state’s largest cities of Charlotte and Raleigh, but NCDOT is working to add this feature at all signalized pedestrian crossings statewide. The agency added that North Carolina has over 3,500 intersections that have signalized pedestrian crossings.

Since making this policy change earlier this year, the department estimates 20 percent of those intersections now have a leading pedestrian interval for improved safety.

Going forward, the department and its municipal partners will continue to increase the number of locations with leading pedestrian interval capabilities, NCDOT said.

State departments of transportation across the country have been making similar pedestrian- and bicycle-themed safety improvements with enhanced or brand new active transportation policies introduced over the last few years.

For example, the Texas Department of Transportation is developing a Statewide Active Transportation Plan or SATP to gather recommendations for improving bicycling, walking, and rolling conditions across the Lone Star state.

In May, the Utah Department of Transportation issued nearly $95 million to support 19 trail projects – including the construction of new paved trails as well as funding for planning efforts to fill in existing trail gaps – as part of creating a regional “Utah Trail Network” across the state.

The Kansas Department of Transportation unveiled a revised active transportation plan in May 2023 to boost walking, bicycling, safe wheelchair use, skateboarding, and non-motorized vehicle mobility options across the state.

The Oklahoma Department of Transportation also began working on its first-ever active transportation plan in 2023 – a policy toolkit the agency said can be used internally and by Oklahoma counties and towns as engineers and designers look to develop more people-friendly infrastructure.

Meanwhile, the Washington State Department of Transportation unveiled a formal Active Transportation Plan in December 2021 – a plan that subsequently won the 2022 America’s Transportation Awards contest’s “People’s Choice Award.”

Alabama DOT ‘Agronomists’ Manage Roadside Vegetation

A recent blog post detailed the critical roadside vegetation management work conducted by “agronomists” at the Alabama Department of Transportation.

[Above photo by the Alabama DOT]

An “agronomist” is a scientist specializing in the study and care of crops and plants, conducting research to improve growth, production quality, and to combat diseases. In the agricultural sector, they often act as liaisons between farmers and researchers.

When it comes to roadside vegetation management, Alabama DOT’s agronomists develop guidelines for mowing operations and the use of herbicides. But the work of the agency’s three agronomists – Jacob Hodnett, senior Alabama DOT agronomist; Steven Drake, agronomist for the Alabama DOT’s West Central Region; and Billy Aaron, the agronomist overseeing the Southeast region for the agency – goes beyond simply ensuring the grass gets cut along state roadsides.

They develop policies to support pollinators and wildlife in and around the state’s road network; experimenting with different management practices to create habitats beneficial to all wildlife. Additionally, vegetation management is the process of promoting stable, low-growing plants and stopping weeds or unwanted growth. The agency’s agronomists save money by eliminating mowing cycles and improving site-distance for motorists.

[Editor’s note: The Alabama DOT also recently implemented a comprehensive program to help prevent heat exhaustion among its transportation workers.]

The agronomist’s role demands a deep understanding of Alabama’s diverse ecosystems, noted Hodnett in the blog post. Alabama DOT’s agronomists, armed with strong educational backgrounds in agronomy and soils and seasoned by diverse agricultural experience, tackle roadside management challenges.

“We utilize many different types of tools,” he added. “I would say our greatest tool that we have at our disposal is the individuals in the districts that get the job done. Their experience and know-how is key in what we do. Without them it would be a jungle out on the roadsides.”

State departments of transportation across the country are constantly working on ways to improve the roadside ecosystems in their respective regions.

For example, in May, the Virginia Department of Transportation announced plans to install 135 new acres of pollinator habitats in 2024 as part of its ongoing commitment to protect the valuable ecosystem provided by pollinators such as bees, birds, butterflies, bats, beetles, flies, and more – mirroring similar efforts by state departments of transportation across the country.

Since 2015, Kentucky Transportation Cabinet crews have seeded more than 100 habitat sites, covering about 200 acres along interstates, parkways, and other state rights of way.

“The cultivation of these pollinator plots is one of the many ways we strive to be good stewards of our highway network,” said KYTC Secretary Jim Gray in a statement. “The habitats we create will improve our ecosystem, help plants reproduce and ultimately build a better Kentucky.” Filled with a variety of grasses and native flowers, the colorful habitats attract birds, bees, butterflies and other creatures that drink nectar and feed off pollen, transporting grains as they move from plant to plant. This pollination helps maintain an abundant and stable food supply for humans and animals.

State DOTs are also investing in a variety of landscaping projects to help transportation infrastructure become more “eco-supportive” of native habitats.

For instance, since mid-2023, a team of landscape architects from the Washington State Department of Transportation has worked with the University of Washington’s Botanic Gardens and Seattle Parks to select and plant native flora and create habitats for wildlife on Foster Island; an area that previously served as a construction zone for the 520 bridge project.

And in 2022, the Illinois Department of Transportation recounted in a blog post how it changed its mowing practices over the years to better protect roadside landscapes that are vital to pollinators and native planet life.

The agency has adopted mowing policies to protect the habitat and migratory patterns of the monarch butterfly and other pollinators that use it as a food source. That policy allows for mowing of the state’s roads in a four-year rotation during the summer.

Environmental News Highlights – August 7, 2024  

FEDERAL ACTION

Balancing Infrastructure and Environment: Challenges and Solutions -The Stream by AASHTO (podcast)



As US bets big on hydrogen for clean energy, local communities worry about secrecy and public health –Grist



Meat mess on Oakland freeway spurs calls for nationwide safety changes -KNTV-TV



The 5 Coastal States That Face the Most Devastating Flood Risk –CityLab



The 9-to-5 commute may be over: The U.S. commuter rail renaissance is just beginning -Mass Transit (op-ed)

 

COVID-19

The Pandemic’s Tenacious Grip on Traffic Safety –AAA



Post-Pandemic, Micromobility Ridership, Cost on the Rise -Government Technology

 

NEPA

Beyond NEPA: Understanding the complexities of slow infrastructure buildout -Clean Air Task Force (commentary)

 

INFRASTRUCTURE RESILIENCE AND SUSTAINABILITY

Derelict vessels present problems for ports -Peninsula Daily News



Using AI in pursuit of better bike paths -UC Santa Barbara



MassDOT Unveils Final Plan for Beyond Mobility PlanMassachusetts DOT (media release)



Caltrans Unveils New Tool to Prioritize Multimodal Infrastructure Investments to Combat Climate Change -California DOT (media release)

 

ELECTRIC VEHICLES, INFRASTRUCTURE AND POLICIES

How Texas Is Using Technology To Curb High Pedestrian Fatality Rates -Route Fifty



FAA Announces $427 Million in Grants from Bipartisan Infrastructure Law to Modernize Airports -FAA -(media release)

 

AIR QUALITY

Alabama Researchers Get Grant Focused On Reducing Diesel Emissions At Ports -WVUA-TV



On Lake Michigan, a coal-fired steamship and ferry eyes a clean-energy future -Bridge Michigan

 

NATURAL RESOURCES

E-Bikes Are Half the Bicycle Traffic in Maine’s Acadia National Park -Bangor Daily News



A Vast Wetland Park Seeks to Slake a Thirsty Megacity –CityLab

 

CULTURAL RESOURCES

For one Austin summer camp, public transit is part of the adventure -Texas Standard



What a Beautiful Bus Stop Can Do –CityLab

 

HEALTH AND HUMAN ENVIRONMENT/ACTIVE TRANSPORTATION

Bikeshare Is More Popular Than Ever. But It’ll Cost You –CityLab



A new pedestrian and bike bridge for Cloverdale -Sonoma Gazette



As bike and scooter ridership soars, safety challenges grow -Route Fifty



Aviation Walk opens in Hickory, North Carolina -WSOC-TV



Adventure Cycling unveils Arkansas’ second U.S. Bicycle Route -KUAF Radio

 

TRB RESOURCES/RESEARCH/ANNOUNCEMENTS

Visualizing Risk for Resilience -TRB (webinar)



Creating Self-Directed Resiliency Plans for General Aviation Airports –ACRP



Cycling and Scooting Through the Years -USDOT Bureau of Transportation Statistics



Guru Madhavan’s New York Trilogy -Issues in Science and Technology

 

FEDERAL REGISTER NOTICES

Announcement of Meeting of the National Environmental Education Advisory Council -EPA (Notice of meeting)



National Environmental Justice Advisory Council; Notice of Charter Renewal -EPA (Notice of charter renewal)



Notice of Availability of a Final Environmental Impact Statement for US Wind Inc.’s Proposed Wind Energy Facility Offshore Maryland -Bureau of Ocean Energy Management, Interior (Notice of availability; final environmental impact statement)



Notice of Rail Energy Transportation Advisory Committee Vacancies -Surface Transportation Board (Notice of vacancies on Federal advisory committee and solicitation of nominations)

The Stream: Balancing Infrastructure and Environment

The latest episode of “The Stream by AASHTO” podcast features an interview with Douglas Kolwaite, environmental program manager with the Alaska Department of Transportation & Public Facilities, discussing how to balance transportation infrastructure with environmental needs via National Environmental Policy Act or NEPA regulations.

[Above image by AASHTO]

“The Stream by AASHTO” podcast is part of a technical service program for state departments of transportation provided by the American Association of State Highway and Transportation Officials. It explores a wide array of environmental topics that affect transportation and infrastructure programs.

Kolwaite heads the Alaska DOT&PF’s Statewide Environmental Management Office, which is responsible for the development and implementation of environmental policy and procedures.

He works closely with the three regions to ensure Alaska DOT&PF’s activities are implemented in a manner consistent with state and federal environmental laws and regulations.

This is the second episode in a two-part series covering the impact of NEPA in the transportation sector. The first episode in this series interviewed Ted Boling – a partner at Perkins Coie with over 30 years of public service – who delved into how NEPA mandates federal agencies to evaluate the environmental impacts of their actions; mandates that crucially influence transportation projects such as road construction and bridge expansions. To listen to part one of this series, click here.

The insights from both of those episodes is all the more critical as the White House Council on Environmental Quality or CEQ recently finalized NEPA reforms in May that implement permitting efficiencies laid out in the Fiscal Responsibility Act of 2023, including setting clear deadlines for agencies to complete environmental reviews, requiring a lead agency and setting specific expectations for lead and cooperating agencies, and creating a unified and coordinated federal review process.

The CEQ said the new rule – which went into effect on July 1 – provides agencies with other new and faster tools to improve the efficiency and effectiveness of environmental reviews. For example, it creates new ways for federal agencies to establish categorical exclusions – the fastest form of environmental review for projects that do not individually or cumulatively have a significant effect on the human environment.

Additionally, the CEQ said those new NEPA reforms are intended to help accelerate reviews for projects that agencies can evaluate on a broad, programmatic scale, or that incorporate measures to mitigate adverse effects – helping the transportation industry and other sectors speed up environmental reviews and providing more certainty when they are designing projects.

TxDOT Details Value of Environmental Field Exercise

In a recent blog post, the Texas Department of Transportation detailed the lessons learned from a field training exercise the agency conducted for select staff from its West Texas District in April.

[Above photo by TxDOT]

The excursion took TxDOT West Texas environmental project planners and specialists to the Davis Mountains region and included visits to national and state parks, prairie dog towns, Comanche Springs, the University of Texas at Austin McDonald Observatory and other settings for a close-up view of plants, lizards, birds, bats, the spring source for the Edwards Aquifer and more.

That training exercise aimed to foster a deeper comprehension of the resources TxDOT is charged with protecting — as required by law — and how its transportation projects may impact them.

“Getting the opportunity to learn about these resources from experts and see them yourself – versus behind a computer screen – is vital for professional development and improving your job performance as environmental staff,” said Rebekah Dobrasko, TxDOT environmental affairs director, in the blog post. “When we understand this, we are able to provide better input to our project engineers and designers.”

In that vein, TxDOT noted that members of the Mescalero Apache and the Ysleta del Sur Pueblo tribes spoke to the group; sharing their history and the important places, plants, animals and other natural resources revered for their significance.

“This isn’t something we get to experience every day, and it gave me a better understanding of why it is important that we coordinate with these groups for certain projects,” said Holly Brady, a TxDOT environmental planner in Odessa.

That interactivity speaks to TxDOT’s commitment to building relationships with tribes as part of a consultation process guided by the National Historic Preservation Act, the agency explained – a law helps identify and minimize any potential impacts of a project on prehistoric archeological sites, cemeteries and other places of cultural significance.

Meanwhile, the group also visited the “bat-occupied underside” of a bridge on SH 17 over Frazier Canyon. The TxDOT staffers also heard from an official with the Texas Parks & Wildlife Department as part of that visit, with the official explaining the deadly impacts of “White-Nose Syndrome” on hibernating bats, as well as how to TxDOT employees can identify endangered and threatened bat species in Texas.

“The visit to the bridge underpass and the presence of bat communities was an eye-opener,” said Adrian Aguirre, an environmental specialist in El Paso.

He added that the experience highlighted the importance of thorough environmental reports prior to construction and the importance of effective management to minimize a project’s impact on the habitat of protected and endangered species.

“It’s easy to get bogged down in the mundane of our jobs — the changing laws and regulations, redoing project clearances that are affected by these changes, and so on,” added Bridget Dawson, a project planner in TxDOT’s San Antonio office. “This environmental field training course was a grassroots revival of passion for everything that led the TxDOT environmental staff to this profession in the first place — our love for nature and the desire to better understand, protect, and preserve it.”

Environmental News Highlights – July 31, 2024  

FEDERAL ACTION

Northeastern State DOT Projects Win Regional Awards -AASHTO Journal



White House Says Better Tech Could Help Environmental Permitting Process -Nextgov/FCW

US Bike Share Ridership Hit Record High in 2023 –Planetizen

 

INFRASTRUCTURE RESILIENCE AND SUSTAINABILITY

Arkansas coalition receives $100 million in federal funds for energy, environment projects -Arkansas Advocate

 

ELECTRIC VEHICLES, INFRASTRUCTURE AND POLICIES

Bill replacing alternate fuel tax with annual fee signed by Pennsylvania governor -WHTM-TV

US Public EV Chargers Set to Surpass Gas Stations in Eight Years -Bloomberg Green

How electric vehicles could improve our mental health -BBC (video)

 

AIR QUALITY

Air pollution impacts from warehousing in the United States uncovered with satellite data -Nature Communications

EPA announces $38 million to cut climate pollution, improve air quality, and advance environmental justice in Alaska -EPA (media release)

 

ENVIRONMENTAL JUSTICE/EQUITY

Rural Minnesota communities gain expanded public transportation options -Public News Service

Seven Best Practices for Prioritizing Transit Equity -Kimley-Horn (commentary)

NATURAL RESOURCES

How TxDOT Crews Helped Battle Major Wildfire -AASHTO Journal

Great Salt Lake dry-up may be increasing greenhouse gas emissions -The Hill


CULTURAL RESOURCES

A Love Song to Smelly, Inconvenient, Glorious Mass Transit –CleanTechnica

A return to remember: Long Beach Airport welcomes public back to its Historic Terminal -Press Telegram

Sheepskin Trail (PA) gets $1 million boost for expansion -Herald Standard

 

HEALTH AND HUMAN ENVIRONMENT/ACTIVE TRANSPORTATION

New Orleans to expand bike network, offer rebates for e-bikes -Axios New Orleans

Florida law enforcement cracking down on drivers who don’t stop for pedestrians -WOFL-TV

Pedestrian river bridge connecting North Side, northeast Minneapolis draws excitement -Star Tribune

Coastal path added to U.S. Bike Route 95: National designation could bring tourist dollars to Ventura County, California -VC Reporter

Creating a Statewide Biking and Walking Database for California -Portland State University

Massachusetts Receives $360,000 for Mobility Management Pilot Program -Massachusetts DOT (media release)

 

TRB RESOURCES/RESEARCH/ANNOUNCEMENTS

Examination of Transit Agency Coordination with Electric Utilities, from TRB’s Transit Cooperative Research Program –TCRP

Designing the Transportation Agency of the Future -TRB (webinar)

Day-to-Day Practices to Reduce the Carbon Footprint of Asphalt -TRB (webinar)

Visualizing Risk for Resilience – NCHRP (webinar)

Mitigate Tree Obstructions Near Airports -ACRP (webinar)


Design Guide for Bus Stops Adjacent to Cycling Infrastructure – British Columbia Ministry of Transportation and Infrastructure (link to pdf)

 

FEDERAL REGISTER NOTICES

Announcement of Fiscal Year 2024 Low or No Emission Program and Grants for Buses and Bus Facilities Program and Project Selections -FTA (Notice and implementation guidance)

Corporate Average Fuel Economy Standards for Passenger Cars and Light Trucks for Model Years 2027– 2032 and Fuel Efficiency Standards for Heavy-Duty Pickup Trucks and Vans for Model Years 2030–2035; Correction -NHTSA (Final rule; correction)

2025 Clean Air Excellence Awards Program; Request for Nominations -EPA (Notice)

Notice To Renew the Transforming Transportation Advisory Committee (TTAC) -Office of the Secretary of the Department of Transportation (Notice)