The Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act was approved by the Senate, 69-30, a massive bill that a bipartisan group of 10 lawmakers shepherded as compromise legislation.
The Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act was approved by the Senate, 69-30, a massive bill that a bipartisan group of 10 lawmakers shepherded as compromise legislation.
WORCESTER â Federal lawmakers from Massachusetts have reintroduced legislation to expand investments in passenger rail, which they say would give Western Massachusetts communities a needed boost.
Karen Christensen, a rail advocate who lives in Great Barrington, joined U.S. Sen. Ed Markey, D-Malden, and U.S. Rep. Jim McGovern, D-Worcester, for a Wednesday news conference at Union Station in Worcester. The lawmakers announced the reintroduction of the Building Rail Across Intercity Networks to Ride Around Interior of the Nation (Brain Train) Act, which Markey first introduced last May with U.S. Rep. Richard Neal, D-Springfield.
âThis is our moment, our chance to make generational investments in our common future,â said Christensen, who founded the nonprofit Barrington Institute and the âTrain Timeâ podcast. âThere is no justification for leaving parts of the United States behind: 21st-century connectivity can give every citizen â in cities and subur
WORCESTER A public investment in intercity, particularly railroads connecting Western Massachusetts with Central and Eastern Massachusetts, can help local economies develop and curb the nation s carbon footprint, U.S. Sen. Edward J. Markey said. We have become a box-office smash as a state, as a destination economically for people not only across our country but across the world, Markey said. We want to continue to make this a welcoming place and rail is an essential part of that planning.
Markey and U.S. Rep. James McGovern, D-Worcester, announced the reintroduction of the Building Rail Across Intercity Networks to Ride Around Interior of the Nation Act, or the BRAIN TRAIN Act, Wednesday during a press conference at Union Station. Markey initially introduced the legislation last May with U.S. Rep. Richard Neal, D-Springfield.