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In place of cash collection booths, PlatePay, a cashless pay-by-mail system, operates on all of the state's turnpikes, including the Kilpatrick Turnpike, Kickapoo Turnpike, and Creek Turnpike. As of November 2024, the entire turnpike system is cashless; the last toll booths at the Will Rogers Turnpike closed as part of the transition to PlatePay.
Chickasaw is located in eastern Mobile County at It is bordered to the east by the city of Mobile, to the south and west by Prichard, and to the north by Saraland. U.S. Route 43 (Telegraph Road and North Craft Highway) is the main road through Chickasaw, leading south 5 miles (8 km) to downtown Mobile and north 60 miles (97 km) to Jackson.
On Friday, city, state and Chickasaw tribal leaders held a news conference to announce a funding agreement for the redesign and construction of the intersection.
Metropolitan Area Projects Plan (MAPS) is a multi-year, municipal capital improvement program, consisting of a number of projects, originally conceived in the 1990s in Oklahoma City by its then mayor Ron Norick. A MAPS program features several interrelated and defined capital projects, funded by a temporary sales tax (allowing projects to be ...
A state contract executed in 2011, reserved 136,000 acre-feet of water for the Oklahoma City Water Utilities Trust. (OUT) [b] The Chickasaw Nation and Choctaw Nation filed a federal lawsuit in a U.S. District Court in 2011, seeking an injunction that would prevent the state and Oklahoma City from transporting water from Sardis Lake to Oklahoma ...
MEMPHIS, Tenn.--(BUSINESS WIRE)-- The Chickasaw MLP Separately Managed Account strategy has been ranked #1 out of 1,798 managers by Lipper, Inc. in their Top 40 Money Managers report in the U.S ...
A large area of land, including the location of the future city of Chickasaw, was purchased. In order to develop the shipbuilding business and the supporting infrastructure, three companies—Chickasaw Shipbuilding and Car Company, Chickasaw Utilities Company, and Chickasaw Land Company—were formed. [1]
The United States agreed to pay the Chickasaw people $300,000, at the rate of $20,000 annually for 15 years, in return for the right to all Chickasaw land east of the Mississippi River and north of the new state of Mississippi border. [2] [3]