Transportation leaders Rick Cotton and Jamie Torres-Springer reiterated their commitment to sustainability and diversity at City and State’s annual infrastructure summit.
Gov. Kathy Hochul's proposed budget includes about $6.9 billion for state-owned road and bridge construction and repair, $3 billion toward the Metropolitan Transportation Authority’s latest capital plan and boosts to the operating budgets of the MTA and other downstate transit agencies.
New York, New Jersey and Connecticut are bracing for snow on Sunday, and officials across the Tri-State Area are warning residents to be prepared.
State Agriculture Commissioner Richard A. Ball on Friday announced two funding opportunities are available to support New York's county and local fairs. The state's Transportation for Youth to New York State County and Local Fairs Competitive Grants Program will provide $350,
With snow and extreme cold fueled by a Nor'easter are poised to sweep across New York, Gov. Kathy Hochul is urging residents to prepare for hazardous travel conditions and dangerously low temperatures.
A recent report from the National Transportation Research Nonprofit, TRIP, reveals that one-third of Rochester's state-maintained roads are in "poor or mediocre condition."
Roadway safety is simply not a priority, a Streetsblog analysis reveals. Meanwhile, 142 people are injured every day on our streets.
More than a dozen counties are under a state of emergency as areas of upstate New York could receive multiple feet of snow.
Sean Duffy, a former Fox Business host and Wisconsin congressman, would head a sprawling Transportation Department that oversees aviation, rail and transit.
The Salamanca Common Council held its reorganizational meeting for 2025 on Jan. 8, adopting several routine measures for the start of the year.
New York City's speed cameras are an unqualified success — a new report issued on Thursday reveals that speeding has dropped by 94 percent at locations with the automated enforcement devices — yet the 750-school-zone program will still need to be reauthorized by state legislators before the end of the legislative session in June.
Just over 55% of registered voters in New Lebanon voted in Tuesday's referendum on the walkable downtown project. As a result of the referendum vote, the town will begin the next steps of design work and a public input process for the project, Houghtling said.