In June 2009, CCR signed a second lease agreement, expanding its system. The lease covered of Norfolk Southern track between the Von Willer yard (near E. 93rd Street and Harvard Avenue) in Cleveland and
Aurora, Ohio. In January 2011, the CCR signed an agreement with the Cleveland-Cuyahoga County Port Authority, which operates the Port of Cleveland, to run a new switching service, called the Cleveland Harbor Belt - CHB. Although only a few thousand feet of track were built, the service made it much easier for Great Lakes freighters to move cargo directly onto rail cars, which would be pushed by a CHB locomotive onto the tracks, or connect to a train of a nearby
Class I railroad. That same month, the CCR won a $170,000 ($ in dollars) loan from the
Ohio Rail Development Commission to build a spur in
Bedford Heights, Ohio, which would allow the CCR to serve four steel companies. Brown discovered the spur, which had gone unmarked on railroad maps, in late 2010. The state loan allowed CCR to replace about of missing track, cut back vegetation, repair and rehabilitate the existing rails and track bed to make the spur usable, and a loading/unloading area. The CCR was sold to Omnitrax, and is now called the Cleveland & Cuyahoga Railway LLC - CCRL. ==See also==