Newsroom

There are a number of ways to keep informed about COG, its members, and programs. The Newsroom feed lists news releases and highlights as well as TPB News articles. A variety of content is also available through digital subscriptions.  

For story ideas, data inquiries, and to connect with officials and subject matter experts, reporters should contact the Office of Communications. For questions about TPB News, please contact the Department of Transportation Planning.
 

COG's Podcast: Think Regionally

(Email_Header)_Think_Regionally_(1)

COG's podcast, Think Regionally, raises awareness about metropolitan Washington's biggest challenges and focuses on solutions. The podcast, which is hosted by former Washington Post columnist Robert McCartney, features local government, business, and non-profit leaders talking about a variety of timely topics, including the region's economy, racial equity, transportation, housing, and climate change.

Visit the podcast page.


Newsroom Archives

  • News Release

    Street Smart Campaign Urges Increased Attention on Roadways

    As Daylight Saving Time ends, local officials look to reduce crashes involving pedestrians and bicyclists during darker months. Representatives from COG, the District of Columbia, Maryland, and Virginia, kicked off the fall campaign on November 7 at Sherman Avenue and Euclid Street in Washington, D.C.

  • Region Forward Blog

    The PicMe Project: COG's Newest Foster Care Adoption Initiative

    PicMeBlog-507x315
    Support the PicMe Project today!

    November is National Adoption Month. It is an annual campaign to increase public awareness of the half million children who are waiting to be adopted from foster care across the country.

  • News Release

    PicMe Project Joins in Celebrating November as National Adoption Month

    The Metropolitan Washington Council of Governments (COG) is re-launching a photo project to highlight and find loving homes for teenagers in foster care across the Washington region in honor of November as National Adoption Month. The PicMe Project will feature 60 second slideshows that will be promoted on the COG website, the PicMe Project Blog and COG social media accounts among others.

  • TPB News

    TLC Promoting Non-Auto Travel Options in Region's Suburban Communities

    Several planning studies and preliminary engineering projects receiving funding under the Transportation/Land-Use Connections (TLC) Program this year aim to promote non-auto travel options in suburban communities across the region. One of the planning studies will focus on the design and coordination of a new bicycle and pedestrian trail system to serve Montgomery County’s new Life Sciences Center, planned just between Gaithersburg and Rockville.

  • Region Forward Blog

    Metropolitan Washington Continues to Lead on LEED and Other Green Energy Initiatives

    WSSC-Solar-507x315
    WSSC Solar

    For the past several years COG has tracked the region’s progress in addressing climate change and meeting the ambitious goals of its 2008 National Capital Region Climate Change Report . In this year’s Climate and Energy Progress Report COG for the first time also compared metropolitan Washington to other regions around the nation.

  • News Release

    Barbara Donnellan Wins Visionary Leadership Awar

    Barbara Donnellan, Arlington County’s County Manager, received the 2014 Visionary Leadership Award on October 17, a prize that recognizes top government officials for their outstanding contributions to metropolitan Washington and their home jurisdictions.

  • News Release

    Officials Approve Update to Region's Long-Range Transportation Plan

    At its October meeting, members of the Transportation Planning Board voted to approve the 2014 Constrained Long-Range Transportation Plan (CLRP), which includes all regionally significant transportation projects and programs that are planned in metropolitan Washington between 2015 and 2040.

  • TPB News

    Concerted Action Leads to Major Improvements in Region's Air Quality

    Ground-level ozone concentrations in the Washington region exceeded healthy levels on just four days each of the last two summers, down from 43 such "exceedance" days as recently as the summer of 2007, and 67 during the summer of 1998.

Results: 2084 Articles found.