One dredging project, estimated to cost $25 million-$100 million and run from September until February 2027, would remove as much as 400,000 cubic yards of largely silt and clay from Newark Bay. A second Corps project would remove material from waters south of the Verrazzano-Narrows Bridge and in the Arthur Kill Channel, the water between New Jersey and Staten Island.
Regional Roundup
A roundup of transportation news from daily, weekly and online outlets
Showing 81-90 of 280 articles
Hudson County Executive Craig Guy announced Wednesday the Board of County Commissioners unanimously voted to award a contract to transportation consulting firm Nelson/Nygaard to conduct a Bus Rapid Transit feasibility study along John F. Kennedy Boulevard in Bayonne and Jersey City.
The final stop of NJ Transit's Raritan Valley commuter line, the High Bridge station, is getting much needed attention from NJ Transit with infrastructure items being addressed as better weather conditions have arrived.
The two massive tunnel boring machines that will do the first drilling for the Gateway Rail Tunnel between New York and New Jersey are now in North Bergen, laid out in components across a construction site. Even the parts are gigantic, dwarfing the people who work on it.
The first of a fleet of new electric-powered Multilevel III rail cars were unveiled Monday, more than seven years after they were ordered in 2018, and Gov. Mikie Sherrill said she wants them put in service this year.
Atlantic City has begun the final phase of the Atlantic Avenue Improvement Project, marking a major milestone in the much-anticipated transformation of Atlantic Avenue.
The Bayonne City Council is expected to soon advance plans to construct a pedestrian bridge over Route 440, connecting the the 34th Street Hudson-Bergen Light Rail Station and The Peninsula at Bayonne Harbor.
Rail infrastructure projects across Morris, Sussex, Hunterdon and Somerset counties are among 11 initiatives receiving funding through the state’s Fiscal Year 2026 Rail Freight Assistance Program, totaling more than $26.3 million, officials announced.
The U.S. Department of Transportation's National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA)'s Put the Phone Away or Pay campaign reminds drivers of the deadly risks and legal consequences, including fines for texting and messaging while behind the wheel.