West Central Valley schools now use GPS tracking to let parents monitor bus locations in real-time, improving safety and efficiency across the district.
Fargo middle and high school students can now scan their IDs or enter numbers when boarding the bus, letting parents track them via the “Here Comes the Bus” app.
KANSAS CITY, Mo. — Kansas City’s streetcar extension aims to connect evolving Midtown neighborhoods between Union Station to the Country Club Plaza. The 3.5-mile southern streetcar plans an Oct. 24 ...
The National Hurricane Center is monitoring a new system, Invest 95L, in the Atlantic. The system has a high chance of developing into a tropical depression within the next week. Forecasters expect ...
PHILADELPHIA (WPVI) -- Our next SEPTA Spotlight shines a light on the important track inspectors on the rail system. Anthony Stumpo is an 8-year veteran of SEPTA. He is one of 54 track inspectors and ...
UPDATE 8:25 p.m.: According to LPSS spokesperson Tracy Wirtz all proposed school projects were approved at Thursday’s meeting. ORIGINAL STORY: LAFAYETTE, La. (KLFY) — The Lafayette Parish School ...
School districts are increasingly equipping buses with technology like GPS, live cameras, and student tracking apps. This new technology aims to improve student safety, create efficiencies, and help ...
WILL IT EVER get off the ground? It was never going to be easy for France and Germany, two big countries with wildly differing political and strategic cultures, to collaborate on one of the most ...
PATH riders are close to getting new fare cards as the massive $430 million PATH Forward infrastructure project is slated to be completed next spring, project officials said. The PATH Forward ...
ST. LOUIS — On Friday morning, the board of Bi-State Development voted to re-evaluate the MetroLink Green Line project with a pivot from light rail to bus rapid transit. Bi-State Development manages ...
NEW YORK (AP) — Soon people will be able to use satellite technology and artificial intelligence to track dangerous soot pollution in their neighborhoods — and where it comes from — in a way not so ...
NASA is monitoring a bus-sized asteroid that’s expected to zoom past our planet tonight at around 19,000 miles per hour, according to the space agency's Center for Near-Earth Object Studies (CNEOS).