Transportation

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    Transportation workers represented by AFSCME keep America moving, ensuring that people and goods travel safely throughout the country. We design, build, maintain and operate our nation's streets, highways, airports, public transport, parking facilities and ports; keep buses and rapid transit trains rolling; plow roads; inspect bridges, highways and tunnels; and direct traffic.

    Transportation Employees Online Network

    Join your brothers and sisters in the AFSCME Transportation Employees Network. We’ll discuss shared concerns, learn about what’s going on around the country and exchange information and ideas.

    What's Hot

    • Webinar: What You Need to Know About H1N1 Flu
      Forget the hype, attend one of our H1N1 webinars and let an AFSCME health and safety specialist give you the latest information for you and your family.
    • Report Lauds I-95 Toll Express Lanes
      The Florida Department of Transportation has claimed victory against chronic traffic congestion on Interstate 95 -- at least northbound traffic in Miami-Dade -- thanks to the new toll express lanes.
    • Things fall apart as NYC skimps on infrastructure
      It was 10:30 p.m. on Aug. 16 when the ceiling finally collapsed at the 181st Street subway station on New York’s 1 line. Bricks fell 35 feet onto the tracks, hitting and severely damaging a train that was in the station. Fortunately, nobody was injured. While the human drama of being in a subway while tons of bricks crashed down on it is clear, none of the New York press interviewed any passengers or the train’s crew. They followed the Metropolitan Transit Authority’s approach of treating this Sunday evening near-tragedy as a mere interruption of service. New York City’s population is so dense, with more than 1 million people using the subways every workday, that there is no reasonable alternative to mass transit.

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