MBTA, Massachusetts towns
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Remnants of the snow continue and that means delays on both the MBTA and the commuter rail, with trains running at reduced speeds on multiple lines.
The MBTA continued to struggle Thursday as frigid temperatures gripped the region on the back of a significant winter storm at the beginning of the week. The Red Line was running with reduced service due to lingering impacts of Sunday and Monday’s snowstorm,
MBTA customers endured another slow commute Thursday morning due to delays and cancellations. There was reduced service on the Red Line, which MBTA officials said was “due to lingering impacts of the recent winter storm.
The MBTA said it was running reduced service on the Red Line Wednesday because of lingering impacts from the snowstorm. MBTA riders<a class="excerpt-read-more" href=" More
Extensive delays and service disruptions plagued Greater Boston’s transit network Tuesday as the region continued to dig out from nearly 2 feet of snow over the previous two days. The MBTA reported delays of more than 30 minutes on the Red Line,
Trains on the Fairmont, Worcester, Foxboro, Providence and Greenbush lines were canceled.
Storm impacts caused major delays for public transit users on Tuesday. Dozens of trains on the commuter rail were cancelled, and the T’s red line faced major disruptions.
East Boston, Mass., completed a multi-barge roll-on operation using its 500-ton floating drydock, Providence, to launch two newly fabricated dock barges des