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Cascadia Corridor
Overview

The Cascadia Corridor is typically understood to be the region running along the western portions of Oregon and Washington, and up to British Columbia, Canada. Cascadia is inextricably linked through its geography and shared policy challenges and opportunities. Common concerns for Cascadia stakeholders include North-South transportation infrastructure facilitating passenger and freight movement via Interstate 5 and intercity rail; plus U.S.-Canadian border and bilateral trade matters. The shared geography and natural features of Cascadia underlie a broad awareness within the region of nature's majesty and the difficult modern-day challenge of balancing economic and population growth with environmental protection.

Cascadia: More Than A Dream, Miro Cernetig, Vancouver Sun, 4/14/07

Cascadia Transportation

"Amtrak Deal A Key Link In Burgeoning Cascadia Travel," Tom Till, Bruce Agnew, Cascadia Center For Regional Development, Vancouver Sun, 3/20/07

Cascadia Trade and Tourism

New Siding Work To Be Completed In Time For Service To 2010 Olympics," Aubrey Cohen, The Seattle Post-Intelligencer, March 3, 2007




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For More Information: Cascadia Project — Bruce Agnew
208 Columbia St. — Seattle, WA 98104
206-292-0401 x113 phone — 206-682-5320 fax
email: bagnew@discovery.org

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