- Strike Averted: Longshoremen And East Coast And Gulf Port Operators Reach A Deal
- FHWA Announces $635 Million In Grants To Continue Expanding EV Charging and Refueling Infrastructure
- These are just some of the toll industry developments TRN is following.
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Strike Averted: Longshoremen And East Coast And Gulf Port Operators Reach A Deal
The terms remain undisclosed at this time, but the International Longshoremen’s Association (ILA) and the US Maritime Alliance (USMX) have reached a tentative deal for a new six-year contract, CBS News reports. The extension of their current agreement, which was set to expire on January 15, was agreed to after a three-day October walkout.
The workers’ concerns about being displaced by automation has been a sticking point in negotiations, but the two parties said in a joint statement that their new agreement allows for both modernizing ports and creating jobs. The article also provides high-level detail on wages and the types of technology the most advanced US ports currently utilize.
Economic & Social Considerations Affecting Transportation Transportation And Infrastructure Workforce IssuesFHWA Announces $635 Million In Grants To Continue Expanding EV Charging and Refueling Infrastructure
FHWA today announced the award of $635 million in grants “to continue building out electric vehicle (EV) charging and alternative fueling infrastructure.” The funding, made possible by USDOT’s Charging and Fueling Infrastructure (CFI) Discretionary Grant Program and a 10 percent set-aside from the National Electric Vehicle Infrastructure (NEVI) Formula Program grants, will fund “49 projects that will deploy more than 11,500 EV charging ports and hydrogen and natural gas fueling infrastructure along corridors and in communities across 27 States, four Federally Recognized Tribes, and the District of Columbia.” (TRN inserted a link in quoted text.)
The announcement recaps progress made in expanding public EV charging capacity since the 2021 enactment of the Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act (IIJA). It notes the Biden administration “set a goal of building out 500,000 publicly available EV chargers by 2030 – and we are on track to achieve that goal early. As of today, there are more than 206,000 publicly available EV charging ports with 38,000 new public chargers turned on in 2024 thanks to private sector investment, and a combination of direct federal funding, federal tax incentives, and state and local funding.”
Electric and Hybrid Vehicles US Department of Transportation (USDOT) US Gov't Transportation Funding US Infrastructure Funding And Financing InitiativesThese are just some of the toll industry developments TRN is following.
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