Va explores Metro to Woodbridge on heels of billions invested into VRE, HOT lanes expansions potomaclocal.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from potomaclocal.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Partners line up behind Brooks Street transformation, federal planning grant
MIssoula Current
and last updated 2021-07-02 18:35:47-04
MISSOULA â As the City of Missoula pursues the transformation of the Brooks Street corridor, it will receive the backing of Missoula County, one of the Midtown districtâs largest landowners.
This week, the county signed a letter of support as part of an application package seeking around $900,000 in a RAISE planning grant from the federal government.
The letter addressed to Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg, describes the planning grant as a key piece in a larger effort to move Brooks Street away from an âauto-centric business strip into a multi-modal, transit-oriented development corridor.â
AROUND 2,500 imported vehicles have so far been inspected by the Tanzania Bureau of Standards (TBS) since it began vehicles inspecting procedure inside the country two months ago.
BONAVENTURE HIGHWAY (A-10) The following closures are in effect from Friday at 9:30 p.m. and Saturday at 7 a.m.: The Bonaventure Highway (A-10) East between Weillington St. and the Carrie-Derick St. entrance, and heading west on the highway between the Pierre-Dupuy Ave. exit (2) and Wellington St. NUNS ISLAND AREA From Saturday at 1 a.m. to Monday at 5 a.m., the following closures will be in effect: The Nuns Island exit (58) at the end of the Samuel-De Champlain Bridge heading towards Montreal. The Nuns Island entrance for the Bonaventure Highway (A-10) West. A-20/R-132/SAMUEL-DE CHAMPLAIN BRIDGE INTERCHANGE From Friday at 10 p.m. to Sunday at 11 p.m., the following closures will be in effect:
SALT LAKE CITY A plan to extend S-Line streetcar and funding for a new mid-valley Salt Lake County rapid transit bus system were just some of the projects approved under a bill that included over $1 billion in state spending to accelerate transportation and other infrastructure projects across the state.
HB433 cleared the Utah Legislature on it s second-to-last day. It authorized $264 million in bonds for specified transportation and transit projects. It also appropriated about $834.6 million in one-time spending from state revenue sources.
Sen. Kirk Cullimore, who served as the floor sponsor of the bill, explained before the legislation passed that it was meant to speed up a lot of projects on the transportation commission list and address other priority projects in Utah.