News

Cincinnati owning a railroad is a quirk of history, and it's perfectly fine for that era to come to an end. Union Institute and University forfeits accreditation after probation, likely to close.
Voters backed the sale of Cincinnati Southern Railway, the only city-owned interstate railroad in the country. The city plans to put $1.6 billion from the sale into a trust fund for infrastructure ...
As soon as Joe Mallory stepped to the microphone to start the press conference on Oct. 11, he knew the political debate over Issue 22 was getting weird. Mallory, the leader of Cincinnati’s NAACP ...
As Cincinnati voters ponder whether to keep or sell the city's Southern Railway, some wonder why a municipality owns a railroad in the first place.
If Cincinnati voters approve Issue 22 to sell the city railroad, who’s in charge of the money and will safeguard against wasteful spending?. Sixteen financial institutions – including Cincinnati’s own ...
In Tuesday’s election, voters decided to sell Cincinnati’s railroad. Issue 22 allows the Cincinnati Southern Railway board to see the railroad to Norfolk Southern for $1.6 billion.
The Cincinnati Railroad sale has appeared to have been passed by voters, giving the OK to sell the rail line to Norfolk Southern for $1.6 billion. Advertisement ...
The Cincinnati Southern Railway trust fund is already growing. ... It was the first quarterly update on the fund since the board officially sold the railroad to Norfolk Southern Corp. on March 15.
Importantly, only the citizens of Cincinnati can vote to sell the railroad. Our primary job is make sure the CSR provides the greatest long-term value to Cincinnati.
The Cincinnati Eastern, which stretches 70 miles between Mariemont and Plum Run, Ohio, to Peebles, in Adams County, brings Regional Rail’s Midwest presence to a total of seven railroads across ...