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Seattle Monorail & California High Speed Rail Move Forward

bscottid writes "Woo-hoo! The monorail passed in Seattle!. And, it was driven by an amazing grass-roots effort of people who saw a way to use technology to get us moving again here in The Emerald City. Everyone mark your calendars, because in 2007 you're invited up here to take a quick, scenic ride around the beautiful city of Seattle! (Begin Simpsons references now)" It's also worth pointing out that in the recent california election, a pair of bills were passed which put aside approximately $10b for the construction of California's high speed rail project.

586 comments

  1. Yes! Campbell Scott's idea from the movie Singles by joeflies · · Score: 2, Interesting

    oh wait, that was the supertrain.

  2. Move it by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    We must move forward, not backward
    Upwards, not forwards,

    and always twirling, twirling, twirling...

    1. Re:Move it by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "We must go forwards, not backwards, upwards, not forwards, and twirling, twirling, always twirling towards freedom!" - President Clin-ton

    2. Re:Move it by noshellswill · · Score: 0

      Sounds just like drooly Seattle, eh pad're but the bleating liberals love it ... getting all the ducks in place for real, subway muggings.

    3. Re:Move it by corey_lawson · · Score: 2, Insightful

      ...if you've ever been to Seattle, the "subway muggers" have that opportunity already in the bus tunnel stations.

      If you've ever been to Chicago and Seattle, the sound levels between the El and the existing Monorail are completely different. The El sounds like a 727 at takeoff when it goes by. The Monorail is significantly quieter.

  3. but shouldn't it be... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ...such-an-Olympia-idea dept?

  4. Feasability? by lpret · · Score: 2, Interesting

    I've heard many arguments that the distances needed to be covered did not lend itself to high speed trains. Especially in California where frequent earthquakes occur, wouldn't it be better to simply work on a new air-based transportation?

    --
    This is my digital signature. 10011011001
    1. Re:Feasability? by Moridineas · · Score: 2

      Japan has many earthquakes and many high speed trains. Can't be too terrible a combo.

    2. Re:Feasability? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      I've heard many arguments that the distances needed to be covered did not lend itself to high speed trains. Especially in California where frequent earthquakes occur, wouldn't it be better to simply work on a new air-based transportation?
      Like what, a zeppelin? I'll tell you, with the hassle factor of getting to the airport, the strip searches, the sour expressions, and all that, I'd almost rather drive from SF to LA than take a plane. If the trains can offer a lower hassle factor than flying, and keep the transit time significantly less than driving, then I would seriously consider taking a train. Of course, I don't make the trip very often... --AC
    3. Re:Feasability? by mgv · · Score: 3, Informative

      I've heard many arguments that the distances needed to be covered did not lend itself to high speed trains.

      Well it depends on what you are planning. The monorail in Sydney, Australia was sold as the mass transportation of the future here. They tried to take the concept from Japan. Which is somehwat ironic, as its mainly used for transporting the Japanese tourists in Sydney.

      Mass transport it isn't, so check your schematics before you praise it as the solution to urban transit.

      Michael

      --
      There is no cryptographic solution to the problem where the intended receiver and the attacker are the same entity.
    4. Re:Feasability? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      According to Popular Science, airships are coming back.

    5. Re:Feasability? by Pig+Hogger · · Score: 2
      I've heard many arguments that the distances needed to be covered did not lend itself to high speed trains. Especially in California where frequent earthquakes occur, wouldn't it be better to simply work on a new air-based transportation?
      The air transportation system is currently at the brink of collapse. Huge private airlines are being propped-up by huge government subsidies, and yet, are unable to meet the demand. Europe has clearly demonstrated that frequent fast trains can do a far better job than airlines. And air transport is vastly more expensive to operate than low-tech trains. Add to the fact that many people are scared shitless of flying, and the added security requirement, courtesy of Oussama, are adding so much in terms of delays that the attractiveness of flying has decreased to the point that a slightly longer train journey is now quite a viable option.

      Besides, railroads are so much a part of the background american psyche that only the most die-hard unamerican would be for air transport (this must be why Oussama - the penultimate anti-american - has crashed planes instead of trains).

    6. Re:Feasability? by patmoore · · Score: 1

      High Speed Rail is very feasable over the distances in question. (350 miles) Also earthquakes are not an issue that cannot be addressed. The latest TGV line in France was designed to handle an 5.5 earthquake occuring when two trains are passing each other. Also keep in mind that the Japanese have been running HSR trains for more than 40 years. Lots of engineering knowledge there.

      The problem with air transport is that it requires lots of land in a certain configuration and airports tend to be very poor neighbors. This means that airports tend to built away from people. This means that people need to drive to the airport which adds enormously to the total trip time. Compare that to taking the train. Usually the train station is much more accessible so the total trip time is a lot less.

    7. Re:Feasability? by OwnedByTwoCats · · Score: 2
      Besides, railroads are so much a part of the background american psyche that only the most die-hard unamerican would be for air transport (this must be why Oussama - the penultimate anti-american - has crashed planes instead of trains).
      That, and the fact that it's really, really hard to crash a train into a building that isn't right over or next to the tracks.

      Could Osama's men have taken over a PATH train, which goes right under the WTC, and made the towers fall down? I don't see how!
    8. Re:Feasability? by jchernia · · Score: 1

      You forget the '89 quake where many freeways collapsed, but the BART train was up and running the whole time. Much of BART's current political strength can be ascribed to this success. For those who don't know BART is Bay Area Rapid Transit and it runs a third rail style train system from San Francisco to Oakland the the eastern suburbs. It crosses the SF Bay in the highly earthquake resistant "Transbay Tube"

    9. Re:Feasability? by susano_otter · · Score: 2

      I dunno:

      1. Load a traincar full of terrorists with explosive-laden duffel bags.

      2. Wait until train passes under WTC.

      3. ???

      4. Profit!

      --

      Any sufficiently well-organized community is indistinguishable from Government.

  5. Last thing... by MattCohn.com · · Score: 4, Insightful

    The monorail is the last thing Seattle should be worrying about. I live there and trust me, the highway system needs attention and FAST. Traffic is terible, and the Metro bus system got funding cut. Yes, I'm glad the monorail is going ahaid but due to the consept of a monorail only few people are going to be able to regularly use it. Work on our roads and mass transit first thank you very much.

    1. Re:Last thing... by cscx · · Score: 3, Funny

      Yeah they should have used the money to fix the potholes on main Street.

    2. Re:Last thing... by psychogentoo · · Score: 1

      [Marge] But Main Street's still all cracked and broken
      [Bart] Sorry, mom, the mob has spoken
      [All] Monorail! Monorail!
      Monorail!
      Monorail!
      [Homer] Mono- d'oh!

    3. Re:Last thing... by Obliterous · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Seattle trafic is why I moves back to SoCal.

      LA trafic jams may be legendary, but seattle beats 'em. EVERY DAY.

      But if they actually build the monorail to cover the major comute coridors, it might actually reduce some freeway trafic, but I'm not holding My breath.

      If they actually get it built, I'll come back up there for a visit and a ride. but I seriously think that the concept is a touch flawed...

    4. Re:Last thing... by Scrameustache · · Score: 2
      Work on our roads and mass transit first thank you very much.
      Proponents envision the project as the first segment of a 58-mile system that would eventually connect every neighborhood in the city. Passengers would zip along above the traffic, unimpeded by traffic jams and stoplights. The pollution-free transit would carry people
      to jobs, shops, and to watch the city's major league teams play.

      Opponents labeled the project an aesthetic and financial debacle. They foresee billions being spent that would do little to alleviate traffic congestion, plus miles of elevated track marring the skyline.

      Clearly, adding another form of public transit that is not part of the current overcrowding of the roads can only be a good thing? Maybe the traffic would be less horrible if people were going around in monorails instead of driving around...
      --

      You can't take the sky from me...

    5. Re:Last thing... by JoeMac · · Score: 1

      I moved to Seattle a few months ago, and its traffic seems to have to the same root cause as any other place: too many damned people driving too many damned cars by themselves. People here seem to want to try what they're already doing in Denver: making the highway a little wider and pray. But it just ain't gonna work. Commuters' attitudes need to evolve, not the highway.

      At least the monorail will help curb the amount of people commuting by car within Seattle. I agree that the buses (with reduced funding) certainly aren't helping a whole lot. I haven't used the longer-range commuter buses here, but the intra-city buses suck hard. Dirty, late, expensive and confusing...not a good mix.

      Now if they could just make the Burke-Gilman a little safer/well-lit, I'd be happy. Why drive/bus when you can bike?

    6. Re:Last thing... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I live in Seattle too - Greenlake. And you're on crack. The LAST thing that Seattle needs is to blindly allocate billions of dollars to roads. Fortunately, voters understand this and blew R-51 out of the water. What Seattle does need is a viable mass transit system that people actually use. Metro buses blowing the same amount of deisel exhaust as FORTY CARS roar past my house on 1st Ave many times a day, and the vast majority of them have two people or fewer inside. When was the last time you saw a Metro bus full?

      Seattle's bus system is a joke. It's hub based, and if you want to get from point A to point B, you have to take a bus from point A to downtown Seattle, and then from downtown Seattle to point B. Seattle's bus system is a failure, and the hundreds of millions of dollars spent on digging a tunnel through downtown to perpetuate the hub design was wasted money.

      Due to the concept of the monorail, there's finally a glimmer of hope that Seattle's transportation problems may not be intractable after all. It'll take a long time and require East/West spurs off the initial 14-mile North/South line, but it'll take a lot less time than any other solution that has been proposed in Seattle over the last 20 years, and will work a lot better too.

    7. Re:Last thing... by Com2Kid · · Score: 1
      • but the intra-city buses suck hard. Dirty, late, expensive and confusing...not a good mix.


      I disagree.

      Expensive, well yah, thank tim iman for that one.

      Late? Rarely. The times posted are the times that they leave for the stop not their arrival time AT the stop!

      Add five minutes to the given time, no problem.

      Dirty? Maybe the few older ones they have yet to replace.

      Confusing? It is a root hub system, nearly all buses go to downtown, then you transfer to what ever bus goes out from downtown to the part of the city you want to travel to.
    8. Re:Last thing... by theedge318 · · Score: 5, Interesting

      Hate to be the bearer of bad-news, but they aren't "pollution-free transit." They need electricity from somewhere to power the electric motors, whether it be oil/coal/nuclear. The only solution might be geo-thermal/solar/wind/wave ... but they don't provide a signifigant portion of the world's power yet. There is a threshold of ridership, beyond which they become more environmentally friendly than a car, but we are a long way from "pollution-free" forms of transportation.

      I know this comes as a great suprise to all of you driving those stupid little Neighborhood Electric Vehichle ... you are just moving the pollution to some other poor-bastards neighborhood, while you get all the really good parking spots at the mall.

      --
      Sig Nazi- "No Sig for you, come back 1 year."
    9. Re:Last thing... by helix400 · · Score: 2, Funny
      Simpson's quote: [All] Monorail! Monorail!

      I was laughing my head off thinking about that eposide, when I read this line from the article:

      "Supporters chanted "Monorail! Monorail!" at a rally held at Westlake Center after the vote count was announced."

      I was just waiting for some politician to be quoted as saying, "We believe that monorail will put Seattle on the map, right next to Ogdenville, North Haverbrook, and Brockway." =)

      -----
      Old actors don't die, they just go to Old Navy

    10. Re:Last thing... by pediddle · · Score: 1

      Traffic is also caused by one more thing: stupid drivers. Yes, Seattle drivers are probably the most curtious in the country (I live in Seattle, I know), but they are *stupid*. People drive in the left lane at 55mph, go 30 all the way up the freeway onramps... some actually stop on the onramp because they can't find a spot to merge, instead of keeping their speed up and using their signals.

    11. Re:Last thing... by funkapus · · Score: 2

      That's not true, at least in this particular case. Since this is Seattle we're talking about, the power is primarily hydroelectric.

      That's not to say that dams don't have an environmental impact, but they don't "pollute" as such.

    12. Re:Last thing... by avid_gopher_fan · · Score: 1

      You are forgetting the most important thing about public transportation. This is not Europe. Americans are independent people that drive their cars and trucks to work when they want to and only when they want to. Having public transportation may look and sound great, but the fact of the matter is that in the United States of America people do not use public transportation, they use personal transportation. If you disagree please point out a public transportation system that makes money in the US. They don't and until people figure out that Americans are independent travels foolish public transportation boondoogles will be funded that maybe if they are luck help 0.5% of the people in the city. PULIC TRANSIT IN THE UNITED STATES WILL NEVER SUCCEED.

    13. Re:Last thing... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I was there between 98 and 99 and the busses were pretty nice by them. I always used them they carried me whereever I wanted to go without any problems, and usually fast.

    14. Re:Last thing... by JimPooley · · Score: 2

      Can someone mod this avid_gopher_fan down '-1: Arsehole'?

      --

      "Information wants to be paid"
    15. Re:Last thing... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Duh! Who came first the egg of the chicken? Americans don't use public transportation because it sucks. Public transportation sucks because nobody uses it.

      European public transportation is excelent ( in a few cities ) and people use it. They still loose money ( so government funds it ), and some people still drive cars. But they do it by choice. So, you think it is confortable to spend 1 hour driving your car in traffic at rush hour? Fine, it is your choice. Others would rather take a train or metro and be home in half time? Their choice also.

      The problem is when you do not have a choice.

      My 2 cents.

    16. Re:Last thing... by Jon+Peterson · · Score: 3, Insightful

      You may be right. However, no public transportation system anywhere makes money. They are not profit vehicles, they are national infrastructure. Complaining that public transport isn't profitable is like complaining that the Police force isn't profitable - it completely misses the point. If your city is a lawless ghetto, all the businesses will move out, and your tax revenue will plummet by far more than the Police ever cost you.

      Likewise, if the city is a polluted car-bound concrete hell, you'll have a hard time attracting business and rich people who want to live there and contribute to the city's coffers.

      As to the US love of personal transport, I agree that it's a big cultural difference compared with Europe (although the UK is somewhat similar). However - that can change.

      --
      ----- .sig: file not found
    17. Re:Last thing... by PyroMosh · · Score: 1

      Why is he an asshole? Because you happen to disagree with him? What he says may be depressing, and it might be better if he was wrong, but what he says is, well, true. *MOST* Americans do want personal transportation. Do you commute to work in the US via road? If you do, you'll see that most people are alone in their cars. Many places even hav "HOV" (High occupancy vehicle) lanes to encourage carpooling. The way it works is that you can only drive in this special lane if you have 2 (in some places 3) or more people in your car. Since not everyone can use it, the theory is that it'll be faster when the roads are congested. Well, it workd, because almost NOBODY can drive in them. In many places, there is so little HOV traffic that they dropped the programs and converted the HOV lanes back into regular lanes.

      Face it, he's just right. We need to try to find a way of winning people over to mass transit. But nothing so far has seemed to work.

    18. Re:Last thing... by VultureMN · · Score: 1

      It's not flawed. Digging is a lot more expensive, so elevating the rail makes sense. My only concern is if the company the ETC contracts with goes out of business; then it gets hairy.

      One of the amusing things about the monorail is that, in the last month or so, there have been two breakdowns on the old monorail here. Firetrucks and ladders to get the tourists off the thing. heh. If that were a regular occurance, people might get a bit pissed...

    19. Re:Last thing... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You're high, man. Seattle drivers aren't the worst I've seen, but the sure as hell ain't courteous. Drive in the midwest sometimes; Iowa drivers are so courteous it'll drive you batshit.

    20. Re:Last thing... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      When was the last time you saw a Metro bus full?

      Every time I ride, man. 26,28,73,277, 258; especially 4-7pm, they're always FULL, and the tunnel is great, for avoiding downtown walking anyway.


      Is this CPK?

    21. Re:Last thing... by Alan+Partridge · · Score: 1

      public transport systems don't make money ANYWHERE - coz they're not really supposed to but, rather provide a (sometimes questionable) benefit to the public at large.

      --
      That was classic intercourse!
    22. Re:Last thing... by mark_lybarger · · Score: 1

      It is a root hub system, nearly all buses go to downtown, then you transfer to what ever bus goes out from downtown to the part of the city you want to travel to.

      that's a big turn off on most transit systems. if you live in the 'burbs and work downtown, they're great, but if you live in the southwest 'burbs, and work in the southeast 'burbs you gotta go thru downtown then back down to the southeast to get where you're going.

      i don't understand why transit systems can't follow the freeway systems; all of them. mass transit systems are a GOOD THING, but they need to be convenient and easy to use. i've used the transit systems around NY/Manhattan, DC and Toronto, and they all work nicely. i'm not sure if they're modeled after the "highways", but they get you where you want to go, safely and cheeply.

      i would love to see the M.A.D.D. folks get some support for more mass transit systems all around the states. the way those emotional mothers can get legislation passed is pheonominal. i guess they usually have large insurance companies riding on their tails (or the other way around) so it's not likely to happen.

      another issue that doesn't seem to be solved across the board is what's a fair way to fund the transport system? city sales tax? that only hurts the city. city income tax? funded completely by fare prices won't get it since it would be too expensive and people wouldn't ride. i think the state should be responsible for mass transit in all its major cities, and the federal gov't should be responsible for transport between the states. to get if funded, they could stop spending money on research to show how they can drill up all over Alaska, and put money to better causes.

    23. Re:Last thing... by GMontag451 · · Score: 1
      Why drive/bus when you can bike?

      Because it rains half the fucking year here, thats why.

    24. Re:Last thing... by GMontag451 · · Score: 2
      I moved to Seattle a few months ago, and its traffic seems to have to the same root cause as any other place: too many damned people driving too many damned cars by themselves. People here seem to want to try what they're already doing in Denver: making the highway a little wider and pray. But it just ain't gonna work. Commuters' attitudes need to evolve, not the highway.

      The real cause of the horrendous traffic in the Seattle area is the population density spread. You can't just consider the traffic within Seattle, you also have to consider the traffic from Lynnwood to Seattle and Tacoma, from Tacoma to Bellevue, and Seattle to everywhere else. The biggest problem is the fact that a large portion of the commuters going to and passing through the Seattle area *are not from Seattle*. The population density of the outlying areas like Lynnwood is such that it can wreak havoc with the traffic in Seattle but its not economically feasible to do anything about it.

    25. Re:Last thing... by GMontag451 · · Score: 2

      I'd say Seattle drivers are certainly more courteous than the norm, but the midwest certainly takes the cake. Any place where they actually treat the third lane as a passing lane only is just nuts.

    26. Re:Last thing... by GMontag451 · · Score: 3, Insightful
      If you disagree please point out a public transportation system that makes money in the US.

      Public transit is non-profit you idiot, just like public utilities and public sewer systems.

    27. Re:Last thing... by Daniel+Dvorkin · · Score: 3, Insightful

      So ... how much profit does a road make?

      --
      The correlation between ignorance of statistics and using "correlation is not causation" as an argument is close to 1.
    28. Re:Last thing... by stud9920 · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Not to forget that electrical engines are way less lossy than combustion engines, that friction losses are neglectible, that electrical production in a centralized location can use more efficient pollution filter and that electrical engined don't need to stay running at 1000 rpm when in traffic jams (which traffic jams anyway ?)

    29. Re:Last thing... by scotch · · Score: 2
      When was the last time you saw a Metro bus full?

      Just about every day, during my commute to work. Occaisionally, I have to stand, but that is rare. 75% full or more is not uncommon.

      --
      XML causes global warming.
    30. Re:Last thing... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The Sound Transit people are generally pretty good. I commute between Seattle and Redmond every day via bus and while the intra-city busses are sometimes really late, the ST busses manage to somehow navigate through 520 with incredible ease. They've also got neat little reading lights and I do most of my reading on the bus anyway. :)

    31. Re:Last thing... by ScuzzMonkey · · Score: 2

      At least the monorail will help curb the amount of people commuting by car within Seattle. I agree that the buses (with reduced funding) certainly aren't helping a whole lot.

      My question is, did you go to the polls thinking this? Because if that's why you voted for the monorail, you should not have. The studies that ETC did (this is the company that was for the initiative, mind you) indicate the the primary source of riders for the monorail will come from existing bus ridership. In other words, the monorail won't do a damn thing about people commuting by car in Seattle--the people who do that will still do it. It will be no more helpful than buses have been--and that's the optimistic take on the situation.

      I am convinced that if the public education effort had started a little sooner, the monorail wouldn't have passed at all. There were too many misconceptions about the costs and benefits. The closer the election got, the more people began to examine the proposal, the fewer of them liked it. Unfortunately, I think a lot of them voted for it with those misconceptions and aren't going to be thrilled with what they end up with for their money.

      --
      No relation to Happy Monkey
    32. Re:Last thing... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "that electrical engined don't need to stay running at 1000 rpm when in traffic jams (which traffic jams anyway ?)"

      Did you know that you've got a thing called an ignition switch that you can turn off?

      You don't need to inch forward every 10 seconds, you know...

      What's funny is the BMW M3 manual specifically states to shut the engine off, due to loss of MPG and wear if you're sitting in traffic for a length of time.....

    33. Re:Last thing... by Pig+Hogger · · Score: 2
      So ... how much profit does a road make?
      Actually, in France (hardly a parangon of private enterprise), a lot of (interstate-like) highways ARE private companies, charge a (huge) toll, and rack-in quite big profits...
    34. Re:Last thing... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      funniest thing I've read in a while. Thanks slashdot, thanks Ray.

    35. Re:Last thing... by ichimunki · · Score: 1

      He may not be an asshole, but he is an idiot. His rant about public transportation not making money is a lot of hogwash. Public roads don't make any money either. What does make money is selling people vehicles (and status symbols) that they can use on those public roads. In my town, Minneapolis, we had "light rail" for a long time, then it was taken out as the streetcars were replaced with buses manufactured by GM and apparently several managers of the transit system were getting kickbacks GM as well. Nothing like a little corruption to destroy valuable rail-based infrastructure. Bravo to Seattle for looking at mass transit solutions. I was just in Seattle and found their bus system to be fairly friendly-- wish I'd taken some time to check out the local train situation a little better.

      Totally off-topic question to Seattle residents: what the heck is up with pedestrians in downtown Seattle standing on the corner waiting for the light? I felt a little weird jaywalking all the time, but I'll be danged if I'm going to stand around like a dolt when it's obvious there's no traffic.

      --
      I do not have a signature
    36. Re:Last thing... by Jack+Auf · · Score: 1

      They need electricity from somewhere to power the electric motors, whether it be oil/coal/nuclear. The only solution might be geo-thermal/solar/wind/wave ...

      Ever hear of Hydroelectric power? Like we use in the NW.....

      --
      "They that can give up essential liberty to obtain a little temporary safety deserve neither liberty nor safety" - BF
    37. Re:Last thing... by Jack+Auf · · Score: 1

      However, no public transportation system anywhere makes money

      WRONG . Lies, damn lies, and just plain talking out your arsehole.

      --
      "They that can give up essential liberty to obtain a little temporary safety deserve neither liberty nor safety" - BF
    38. Re:Last thing... by American+AC+in+Paris · · Score: 4, Funny
      Hate to be the bearer of bad-news, but they aren't "pollution-free transit." They need electricity from somewhere to power the electric motors, whether it be oil/coal/nuclear. The only solution might be geo-thermal/solar/wind/wave ... but they don't provide a signifigant portion of the world's power yet. There is a threshold of ridership, beyond which they become more environmentally friendly than a car, but we are a long way from "pollution-free" forms of transportation.

      I know this comes as a great suprise to all of you driving those stupid little Neighborhood Electric Vehichle ... you are just moving the pollution to some other poor-bastards neighborhood, while you get all the really good parking spots at the mall.

      There's this big ol' thing in Washington State called the Grand Coulee Dam.

      Rumor has it that it's the world's third largest producer of power.

      Rumor also has it that it's about as pollution-free as power comes.

      But hey, what am I saying? Stupid little Neighborhood Electric Vehicles! If you really cared, you'd be driving a Fnord Behemoth 150 or a Chevee Soverign Nation to and from the Quickie Mart--at least then you're not dumping all that hydroelectric pollution on the poor saps who live near the dam, you insensitive clod!

      --

      Obliteracy: Words with explosions

    39. Re:Last thing... by Scrameustache · · Score: 0, Offtopic

      Oh come on now moderators, you should be ashamed! An obvious troll and you mod him up to 5? Are you guys moderating drunk again? Tsk tsk tsk.

      See, sentences like this:
      to all of you driving those stupid little Neighborhood Electric Vehichle ... while you get all the really good parking spots at the mall.
      Are an obvious sign of trolling. Also, since he isn't stating anything actually relevant in this case (he names 7 forms of power generation and still doesn't mention the one actually used for seattle), modding him +1 Informative is a clear sign of moderating under the influence.

      Sigh, and the metamoderation system won't spot this since they won't see the context...ah well, its just /., its not important eh? : )

      --

      You can't take the sky from me...

    40. Re:Last thing... by William+R.+Dickson · · Score: 1

      Virtually all of Seattle's power is, in fact, hydroelectric.

    41. Re:Last thing... by dhogaza · · Score: 2

      Of course it's also true that Grand Goulee has no fish passage provsions and diminished salmon habitat in the area drained by the Columbia River by roughly 50% ...

      Just one word: tanstaafl

    42. Re:Last thing... by Mikeytsi · · Score: 1

      Totally off-topic question to Seattle residents: what the heck is up with pedestrians in downtown Seattle standing on the corner waiting for the light? I felt a little weird jaywalking all the time, but I'll be danged if I'm going to stand around like a dolt when it's obvious there's no traffic.

      Why? Because it's illegal, and Seattle police tend to ticket people for it. There used to be a problem with people wandering around in the street before crackdowns started happening, I prefer the situation as it is now.

      --
      I've been called a "Fucking Dick" by better people than you.
    43. Re:Last thing... by Scrameustache · · Score: 1

      lol, I pissed off someone, I got moded down as offtopic...
      ah well, here it goes again, wiiii! Oh, and of course, don't bother modding down the troll, he's allright huh?

      Burn karma BURN!

      --

      You can't take the sky from me...

    44. Re:Last thing... by ichimunki · · Score: 1

      Thanks. I kind of figured that it was one of those local crackdowns. First major metro I've been to where I noticed this behavior that it wasn't a survival technique (as in San Francisco). Here in Minneapolis jaywalking seems to be nearly universal.

      --
      I do not have a signature
    45. Re:Last thing... by American+AC+in+Paris · · Score: 2
      Sure, there are ecological concerns--I lived in Spokane for a while, I'm familiar with them. The original poster was focusing on pollution and pollution localization, though, which are pretty much non-issues with the Grand Coulee Dam.

      TANSTAAFL? Give me a break. Barring breeder reactors (which, sadly, won't see the light of day in the US for quite a while,) I challenge you to find a source of energy that even remotely compares to the cleanliness, eco-friendliness and generation capacity of traditional hydroelectric power. Shit, man, it's the 99 cent all-you-can-eat filet mignon and lobster tail lunch buffet of electric power, and all you can say is "it ain't free"?

      Damn.

      --

      Obliteracy: Words with explosions

    46. Re:Last thing... by Rick+the+Red · · Score: 2
      Well, the company that built the existing monorail did go out of business, but that's not a problem because the monorail company (yes, it's owned/operated by a private company, not the city) got the blueprints, and can make their own parts if they need to.

      You can make the same arguement about busses, trains, etc. Hell, you can make the same arguement about the firetrucks that rescued the stranded passengers!. But that shouldn't be a problem. The new Las Vegas monorail has a catwalk for emergencies, and I'll bet the Seattle one will, too. In Japan the monorails have a door at each end, so they can evacuate passengers to another train. This isn't rocket science, folks, just common sense.

      --
      If all this should have a reason, we would be the last to know.
    47. Re:Last thing... by Rick+the+Red · · Score: 2
      You're just nuts. Any place where they actually treat the third lane as a passing lane is civilized and sensible.

      They call it "road rage" and "agressive driving" when I pull up behind some blockhead in the left lane going no faster than the traffic in the middle lane. Yet in Driver's Ed I was taught that the jerk I'm apparantly guilting of (what? "agressing"?) is known as a "Road Hog." They even showed us a Disney film about it, with Goofy playing the part of the Road Hog. Now, thanks to Political Correctness, I'm in the wrong and subject to a ticket!

      Give me a place where they use the passing lane for passing any day!

      --
      If all this should have a reason, we would be the last to know.
    48. Re:Last thing... by RelentlessWeevilHowl · · Score: 1

      And the fact that most of this population has to either (a) drive in narrow corridors north/south between Puget Sound and two lakes, or (b) drive *across* or around the two aforementioned lakes. Did I mention that these are glacial lakes, really long and too deep to build normal bridges?

    49. Re:Last thing... by John+Miles · · Score: 2

      Public roads don't make any money either.

      Like hell they don't. Shut them down and see what happens to your local economy.

      --
      Dahlmann tightly grips the knife, which he may have no idea how to use, and steps out into the plain.
    50. Re:Last thing... by juan2074 · · Score: 1
      You've got it right. No place has ever built its way out of congestion by expaning highways. It did not work in LA, Houston, Atlanta, or even Seoul.

      The problem is worse because people seem to live further from their workplaces than in the past. That usually means that each year there are more vehicle-miles driven than the year before.

      Changes in land-use patterns (which could improve housing affordability), more variety of transportation options (along with more commute-trip reduction programs), and a change in commuter attitudes would help a lot.

      Unfortunately, most people don't understand that the greater their distance from work (and anywhere else they plan to go), the more traffic they will create.

      Also, I commend your will to bike. I have biked several times this year, and maybe will again tomorrow if the weather stays like this. There are other bike paths beside the Burke-Gilman trail. You can get a map of bike routes, if you are interested.

    51. Re:Last thing... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I believe the "Neighborhood Electric Vehichle" you are referring to runs on GASOLINE. It just happens that they make better use of it.

    52. Re:Last thing... by enomar · · Score: 1

      Right on! I was going to say the same thing much less eloquently until I read your post. Wheather it is a monorail or a motorcycle, electric is the next step in cleaning up the environment. Once we do figure out a high-output clean energy, the infrastructure to distribute it and use it in cars will already be laid out.

      --

      :wq
    53. Re:Last thing... by dacetone · · Score: 1

      The police in downtown DO ticket for jaywalking. Here in Belltown, instead of shaking down crack-heads, they hand out tickets for darting across the street (doesn't matter if it's at an intersection or not), even if there's no traffic for miles.

      --
      Just follow the day, and reach fo
    54. Re:Last thing... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Actually, the majority of electrical power generated in washington state is generated through the use of dams. Most of these dams are on the eastern half of the state, and while they aren't environmentally friendly they are polution free (mostly, i guess a little oil from the turbines prolly slips into the rivers). So yes, the monorail is polution free (mostly). There are many dams on the columbia river: http://www.nwd.usace.army.mil/ps/colrvbsn.htm alone that supply power for many states besides washington (california is one of the biggest purchasers of washington power).

    55. Re:Last thing... by lazn · · Score: 1

      Electric engines may be fairly efficent, but batteries are not.

      "Energy efficiency is calculated on the amount of power used from the battery while discharging divided by the amount of power delivered to the batter while charging, multiplied by 100 to yield percent. Pout x 100 /Pin . A lead-acid battery has an efficiency of only 75-85%. The energy lost appears as heat and warms the battery. Keeping the charge and discharge rate of a battery low, helps keep a battery cool and improves the battery life.

      http://xtronics.com/reference/batterap.htm

      "The above losses don't include losses in the charging circuit which can run any where from 60 to 80% - thus the overall- total efficiency is the product of these numbers and ends up being 45 to 68%. (To further this example and to show why physics and not some corporate conspiracy is the reason we don't have electric cars - suppose the controls and motors on a car were 85% - the over all efficiency is now only 38 - 58%. You can see that an electric car would use about twice the energy than a conventional car - not to mention the great cost of the regular replacement of batteries. This is why batteries are best used where only intermittent, or very low power use is required.)"

      So a electric car uses ~TWICE the energy of a gasoline one. Yah, that's for sure the way to decrease our energy use..

      ==>Lazn

    56. Re:Last thing... by spike+hay · · Score: 2

      Ever hear of Hydroelectric [google.com] power? Like we use in the NW [google.com].....

      I'm from WA (Yakima). We are blessed with the Columbia river. A huge river with a large elevation drop. Most other regions don't have this. Hydroelectricity is mostly at capacity now. We have to use other sources such as nuclear and wind to fill in the rest, if we ever ditch coal and oil.

      --
      If you don't understand any of my sayings, come to me in private and I shall take you in my German mouth.
    57. Re:Last thing... by mcspock · · Score: 2

      I totally agree. I think a lot of this plan was banking on the "look at all the places we will go" aspect of proposed expanded routes, but there's no mention of how that will be funded, when it will actually arrive, etc. The potential for the initial line to go over budget and for seattle residents to feel burned when they pass additional taxes to finish it is so high, it's not even funny.

      The worst part about this plan is that it intentionally places the majority of the burden on people who will never use the monorail. People who have nice, $80k BMWs will have to pay something like $800 a year in taxes for the monorail, even though they'd have no reason to use it (they have a BMW). Unemployed carless hippies, who write columns for the stranger, will pay $0 for the monorail construction and will reap the benefits.

      I dont think a monorail is a bad idea in general; there may be a plan that actually covers significant portions of downtown, has a tax plan that scales, has a route or connection for easy airport access, etc. But the plan that passed has none of this, wont fix congestion on I5/I90/99 downtown, and by its own flaws will likely prevent the expanded routes from being built.

      --
      -- Patience is a virtue, but impatience is an art.
    58. Re:Last thing... by coryking · · Score: 1

      Err... Seattle buses are some of the nicest, cleanest buses I've ever been on. Most other cities buses don't even have padded seats!

    59. Re:Last thing... by ichimunki · · Score: 1

      Roads don't make money, except for certain tolls roads and bridges. I never disputed that people using roads make money. But that's a big difference, since in this case the public transit system was expected to pay for itself -- an expectation no one has for roads.

      --
      I do not have a signature
    60. Re:Last thing... by John+Miles · · Score: 2

      But that's a big difference, since in this case the public transit system was expected to pay for itself -- an expectation no one has for roads.

      My point stands, though: I think the only real way to judge the relative merits of two transportation systems is to imagine the effects of their sudden removal from society. Take away (or don't build) the multi-billion dollar monorail or LRT systems, and a few people will be somewhat inconvenienced. Take away the Sound Transit bus system, and a lot of people will be inconvenienced, with a few others being seriously fucked.

      But if you take away the roads, we're all fucked. Unfortunately, that's what the Washington state voters seem hell-bent on doing. Within the next ten to twenty years, the Seattle area will be completely unlivable from the point of view of anyone with a car. Only then will it become clear to the more stubborn anti-car evangelists among us that cars have benefits to society, too... benefits that simply aren't achievable with any form of mass transit that doesn't empower individuals to travel where they want, when they want.

      --
      Dahlmann tightly grips the knife, which he may have no idea how to use, and steps out into the plain.
    61. Re:Last thing... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I hate to be a nitpicker, but Seattle obtains the bulk of it's power from hydroelectricity, a small amount from nuclear, and sells the excess to California down one of the largest power corridors. The "emerald" in Seattle is green. There's a reason green gunk grows everywhere.. what rock have you been living under that you don't know it rains a lot in Seattle?

    62. Re:Last thing... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      As it turns out, Seattle gets nearly 100% of its power from hydro. The city (which owns the power system) has made a commitment to having a zero greenhouse emission energy supply and has invested in efficiency and the new State Line wind farm. The Seattle monorail will be as close to a "pollution free" transit system as you can get. If you want to get picky, yes, the tires are rubber and as they wear they do pollute with the addittion of little bits of rubber to environment, but in the big picture you aren't going to improve on that until you go with maglev.

    63. Re:Last thing... by schuss42 · · Score: 1

      well, in seattle at least, it'll be hydro power, as we have that coming out our ears here. washington's been exporting hydro power to other states for years...

      so unless you count the salmon, it should be fairly impact-free ;)

    64. Re:Last thing... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Actually, Seattle's system isn't nearly as hub-and-spoke as it used to be. Within the city there have always been lots of buses that didn't go downtown, but over the last six years [Metro, our bus agency, works on six year planning cycles] there has been a big focus on suburb-to-suburb route availability.

      It ain't perfect, for sure, but it's a lot better than it was.

    65. Re:Last thing... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Vancouver found the same thing with SkyTrain. The difference, of course, is that you're able to redeploy the bus service you free up to provide better service to other neighborhoods that are currently under-served [of which we have many]. You also provide a fixed system that people can depend on - in Vancouver, 70% of their ridership initially arrived by bus. That's now down to less than 50%, with the difference now coming by bike and foot. People move closer to the stations, BECAUSE THEY KNOW THE STATIONS AREN'T GOING ANYWHERE. Rail has a permanence that bus will never have.

      Plus, and you can laugh all you want, people *like* taking the train. I take the bus daily, and it certainly is not an "enjoyable" experience much of the time. Trains are different, plain and simple.

    66. Re:Last thing... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It goes *way* back - it's part of local folklore that Seattleites wait for lights. These days, the way people drive, it's not safe crossing *with* the light, but still...

  6. Are you a moron by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    What do you think a monorail system is? Sounds like mass-transit to me.

    1. Re:Are you a moron by MattCohn.com · · Score: 1

      It goes from point 'a' to point 'b'. If you don't live in point 'a' and want to go to point 'b' then it really doesn't have much purpose. When I say mass-transit, I mean the Metro bus system. It is able to serve more people more efficiantly. Work on that, and once it's stabalized go to the fancy monorails.

    2. Re:Are you a moron by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      I see. So walking, riding, carpooling to a rail station is out of the question then, sounds pretty damn lazy to me. In terms of energy, rail will always beat out automobiles - yes even busses. There's no question about this, so busses aren't more efficient. Look at the other few hundred cities in the world that uses light rail commuter trains, seems to work just fine. Hell, just look a little north to Vancouver with the Skytrain.

    3. Re:Are you a moron by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Actally it will go to points a,b,c,d,e,f,g,h,i,j, and k. many chokearea are water crossings which require large bridges or fareys(sp). The monorail will be able to carry ~ 6 lanes of traffic over some of these area. I would call this mass transit. BTW, soe are hinting going to the burbs with this already. While burbs are notourous for not likeing taxes, the traffic is bad enough there that many may vote to do just that. After all what does it matter if you park at the end of a monorail or on a road.

    4. Re:Are you a moron by Qrlx · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Fellow citizen of seattle:

      The metro bus system sucks. (every bus system sucks, except for the Peter Pan from DC to NYC to Boston.) Living in Seattle, I used to take that pile of crap that is Sound Transit all the time. One problem is the "ride free zone" downtown. The idea is great--speed buses through the busy downtown corridor by not having to wait for people to pay. The effect has been to turn the bus system into a rolling homeless shelter. Also, there are way too many bus stops. Walk a block, people. We don't need a bus stop on EVERY BLOCK you could skip a block and the bus would get you there much faster. (Try riding the 71/72/73 downtown from the U-district some morning and you will see what I'm talking about.)

      Ultimately, the reason buses suck is because they don't have a right-of-way. They get stuck in traffic jams just like all those freakin' Subaru Foresters and Outbacks do.

      The problem with building more roads is that it will lead to more sprawl, and then you're back to square one.

      Before I was in Seattle, I lived in Washington DC. They have a subway system and it works great. I took it whenever I could. Actually, the metro is about 25 years old now and unfortunately it's pretty much at max capacity. But if you want to see the example of why NOT to just build more roads, look at Northern Virginia. Roads/interchanges the size of the I-5/I-405 split in Tukwila are EVERYWHERE. And it can still take 45 minutes to go ten miles during rush hour. Becuase developers are still building subdivisions like crazy out there, so the roads fill up.

      People who think Seattle has a bad traffic problem clearly haven't seen traffic in a place like DC. We still kinda have nice fresh air out here; doubling the number of roads (hence cars) will break that. Also, the way people drive in Seattle, you could get another 10% usage out of the roads by simply getting people to drive AT the speed limit, not BELOW it, on the major interstates. Frankly, I don't think Seattle drivers have the bandwidth to handle a 16-lane collector-distributor system like where I-270 meets the DC beltway.

      Also, I encourage everyone to do what I did: Move to the city and work in the city. You get a few hours of your day back, and you're not supporting Evil (be it oil-funded terrorists or oil-funded economic destruction off the coast of Spain or oil-funded politicians in the Oval Office) as much. Or, if you work on the East Side, live there too. If you're not willilng to do that, stop bitching about traffic. No job is holding a gun to your head.

      Just my two cents. And please don't take this as a personal attack; I'm just like that.

    5. Re:Are you a moron by global_diffusion · · Score: 2

      word.

    6. Re:Are you a moron by VultureMN · · Score: 1

      Well, perhaps compared to what you're used to, Seattle's bus system sucks. BUT, compared to what I (or a lot of people) are used to, Seattle's bus system is awesome, unfortunately. You mention the 73: the 73 is a fucking godsend to me, seeing as my usual communte involves Bremerton-ferry to 73 to the UD, and the 73 works great. BTW, busses in downtown stop every 2 blocks, not every block. But I grok your idea; I'd like a stop every 4 blocks instead of 2. I mean, hell. Who can't walk 2 fucking blocks?

      And, I know most of the traffic is east-side to downtown, but if I got a job on the east side I'd still live downtown. Eastside is suburban stripmall wasteland. Fuckthat; I want lunch at Mai Phim and sunday nights at the Irish Emigrant.

    7. Re:Are you a moron by alekd · · Score: 1

      Actually the capacity of a road is independent of the speed of driving. There needs to be a certain distance between cars that increases with the speed in order to avoid accidents. If everybody sticks to the 3 second rule, each lane will have a capacity of 1200 cars per hour, independent of speed.

    8. Re:Are you a moron by Qrlx · · Score: 1

      It's funny you mention the Emigrant, my normal haunt is the Galway just across the street... They have trivia on Monday night at the Emigrant, maybe we could do a "team slashdot" thing :)

    9. Re:Are you a moron by Doobian+Coedifier · · Score: 1

      I prefer the Knarr myself....but that's just because I live across the street.

    10. Re:Are you a moron by Qrlx · · Score: 2

      The Knarr? That place has always seemed scary to me.

      not that I'm not in there on the odd night playing shuffleboard, but...

      Well, there are two kinds of bars in Washington State. Those that have pull tabs and those without. The knarr is on the cusp, if you ask me. Actually, that probably gives it a lot of character. "Character" like the big trough urinal that seats 2 or 3 and the open-air drug market in the back parking lot.

      Mainly, the Knarr seems smokier than any of the other places, and that keeps me out. They had pinball last time I was there, though, which is a big plus.

    11. Re:Are you a moron by binaryDigit · · Score: 2

      big trough urinal that seats 2 or 3

      Now there is a mental image that I didn't need early in the morning!

    12. Re:Are you a moron by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's not the (limited) bandwidth. It's the processing speed. You might be able to use a 486 for a linux router/DNS server/firewall/mail server but Microsoft Windows Advanced Server (if it ever ships) requires alot more power to get the job done (on separate redundant multiproc machines.)

      I take that back, nom atter how fast the CPU, if the code is buggy, you'll never get Seattle drivers to handle traffic. The only question is whether it's hard-wired or we can be re-programmed.

    13. Re:Are you a moron by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      yeah, you got to love the sophisticated old world charm of Seattle suburban sprawl. We have the exact same coffee shops and Thai food chains over here on the Eastside, dipshit.

    14. Re:Are you a moron by bucephalis · · Score: 1

      " Actally it will go to points a,b,c,d,e,f,g,h,i,j, and k."

      Actually, no it won't. Read up on it a little. It will go from West Seattle to downtown. And back. A few miles.
      If you don't live in West Seattle and need to go downtown (or the other way), it's useless.
      It's NOT a train. There is a regional light-rail/train system in it's infancy, but this isn't even slightly related.

    15. Re:Are you a moron by bucephalis · · Score: 1

      " I see. So walking, riding, carpooling to a rail station is out of the question then, sounds pretty damn lazy to me."

      You obviously know nothing about the monorail that was approved. It goes from West Seattle to downtown, and back. Period. If you live in West Seattle, that kinda rocks. If you are in downtown, and need to go to West Seattle, that rocks too.
      Otherwise, you are SOL.

      If you are coming from outside of downtown and need to go to downtown, it does nothing for you. It would take LONGER to fight your way to West Seattle
      (Going *Through* Seattle to get there...)and take the monorail.
      If you are coming from outside of West Seattle and need to go to West Seattle, it would take you LONGER to fight your way to downtown and take the monorail.

      Oh, if you're a tourist, It'll rock, too.

    16. Re:Are you a moron by Dolemite_the_Wiz · · Score: 1

      Qrlx, you obviously haven't used the public transportation in LA. Try it some time. You'll think twice about Metro. Also, try riding the busses that say 'Express' on them. You can bypass local stops and head straight into the Buss Tunnel.

      I agree Metro's Ride-Free Zone is a Rolling homeless shelter.

      The problem with Seattle's traffic is the following:

      1) The original road that became I-5 today was originally a road that was designed to have Seattle be a destination and not a stopping point for cities North/South of Seattle. This is the main reason why I-5 can't and probably will never be expanded.

      2)Most of the traffic infrastructure in the Seattle area reached it's Maximum Capacity 15 years Ago. Ever Drive through Downtown Redmond? Case in Point.

      3) The State Legislature Keeps Dragging it's feet on the topic of Transportation improvments state wide (Read: 520, 405/167 interchange, I-5/I-90 interchange, and 405 in general.) Last year Gov. Locke made the Legislature stay 90 extra days past their normal session for them to work on a Transportation bill.

      Of course, you'll never read this in the Seattle area papers.

      Voters in Washington need to send a message to the elected officials that if they don't solve this issue now, they will vote people who will!

      --
      Save the World! Use a Quote!
    17. Re:Are you a moron by Aexia · · Score: 2

      Voters in Washington need to send a message to the elected officials that if they don't solve this issue now, they will vote people who will!

      Voters here in Washington(or rather, voters outside King County) have repeatedly cried out that they want their transportation problems to be fixed by the government, be it new roads, mass transits, whatever.

      Unfortunately, they've also repeatedly said they're unwilling to actually *pay* for any of it. The most hilarious part is that they're unwilling to spend money to fix a "Puget Sound Problem." Given that Puget Sound has been paying the bills for the rest of the f*cking state's transportation for years, it comes off as a "I've got mine" attitude.

    18. Re:Are you a moron by Aexia · · Score: 2

      Also, I encourage everyone to do what I did: Move to the city and work in the city.

      I recently moved to Bellevue and work in Redmond. 10 minute commute each way. 15 minutes if traffic is bad in the evening.

      I used to live in Kenmore and my commute was 35-50 minutes each way. It's given back one hour of my life a day at least. I don't think I could ever go back to anything longer than that.

    19. Re:Are you a moron by funkapus · · Score: 2

      No, *you* obviously know nothing about the monorail that was approved. It goes from West Seattle to SoDo to the stadiums to downtown to Belltown to Seattle Center to Queen Anne to Ballard. With numerous stations along the way. Anybody who's along that route can get use out of it.

      This is an in-city transportation solution. Paid for and approved by the citizens of Seattle. There's no question that we need regional transit too, but that doesn't invalidate this plan.

    20. Re:Are you a moron by funkapus · · Score: 2

      Not true. It'll run West Seattle to downtown and all the way north to Ballard. If you live in Queen Anne, the ID, Belltown, Ballard, West Seattle or Greenwood you will get use out of this.

    21. Re:Are you a moron by tshak · · Score: 1

      Is that the Irish pub with the Scottish guy doing trivia on the West side of I-5 near the U-District? If so my roommate goes regularly and I go with him occasionally.

      --

      There is no longer anything that can be done with computers that is nontrivial and clearly legal. -- Paul Phillips
    22. Re:Are you a moron by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      he's right the peter pan bus line is fabulous.

    23. Re:Are you a moron by mcspock · · Score: 2

      Uhh if you live in the ID? Yeah you can walk 10 blocks to the monorail station at the stadiums then catch the monorail up to...west seattle or downtown or ballard.

      I didn't know it hit queen anne, i thought the route went up 15th, so it went between magnolia and queen anne up to ballard. Also it doesn't make it as far as greenwood or greenlake last i checked.

      The real problems in seattle are: traffic on I5, traffic on I90, and traffic on the barely alive alaskan way viaduct (99). The monorail, as proposed, does nothing for people who live in the U district (maybe they could take a bus over to ballard then hop on the monorail? FUN), capitol hill, beacon hill, fremont, most of queen anne, wallingford, blah blah blah. It does very little for people who live in belltown or downtown (what, i'm going to hop on the monorail to go to a mariners game twice a year? well, that was worth $150). It also uses a 30 year tax to fund one single line; how are the other proposed expanded lines going to be funded? additional 30 year taxes of 1.4% annually on cars?

      Having "a" monorail might be a good idea, but having _this_ monorail is a bad one.

      --
      -- Patience is a virtue, but impatience is an art.
    24. Re:Are you a moron by coryking · · Score: 1

      Dude - the 71/72/73 are some of the best buses here if you catch the express buses. You get out of the tunnel, and next stop is the UW. Did you actually walk into the tunnel and catch those?

    25. Re:Are you a moron by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I think you're being short-sighted. No one said this is the "complete" mass-transit solution. It's not going to solve Seattle's traffic woes nor will every citizen benefit from the green line. This is the start of a city-wide system. Will any transit proposal ever pass if they propose to build 6 different lines all over the city?

      It's unfortunate that the money has to come out of the MVET, but the time is now to start building. Seattle has waited too long and bypassed other opportunities and this is the end result. In '68, voters in Seattle turned down a city-wide rail system which was 2/3 paid by federal grants. That money went to Atlanta.

      We've all seen what's happened with the Sound Transit boondoggle. I think the ETC is going to have its shares of bumps in the road as it should, but will prove to be successful in the end. All the NIMBYs will be riding it with their Kenneth Cole's on, wondering why they voted no in 2002 because of aesthetic reasons.

    26. Re:Are you a moron by Qrlx · · Score: 1

      Dude - try taking them **downtown** from the top of the ave. if you're above 55th you might get a seat. you spend **forever*** getting thru the u-district -- making a stop at each block where like 20 more people get on. that part takes 20 minutes on a bad day. Once you get to the highway, it's great. Before then, it 5uxXx0rZ.

      They are nice in reverse--once they stop being exprsses. I used to get off at that first stop and just walk the mile because I coudljn't stand the horrible inefficiency of the stop-at-every-block lameness.

    27. Re:Are you a moron by J.+Random+Software · · Score: 2

      We live up by Northgate, because that's where bus commuting is at least tolerable yet we can afford a decent apartment. In my ten-year career I've worked at seven companies in ten different offices, ranging from Fremont to the eastside to Rainier Beach. A manager at one company thought he was being clever by buying a house on Mercer Island just up the hill from the office--so they promptly moved the dev team to Bellevue, then Seattle, and now Issaquah.

      Living where you work is a nice theory, but since even viable employers can't offer job security and still aren't comfortable with telecommuting, unless you're going to break your lease or sell your home every few quarters it's not going to happen except by chance.

    28. Re:Are you a moron by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      How you can talk about something when you don't even know its actual route is...interesting.

      No transit system anywhere in the world was built overnight. You have to build a first line. The City's transportation corridor identified the four busiest corridors IN THE CITY as Rainier, Aurora, 15th NW, and West Seattle's Fauntleroy/California pair. The Monorail takes care of the last two, light rail is supposed to deal with the first, and Metro wants to try BRT on Aurora [although the merchants would rather have Monorail there].

      Freeway traffic will always be freeway traffic. As you start to connect destinations people live with the places they work, shop, and recreate, you give them ways to not have to use the freeway. But you'll never have uncongested freeways, for reasons which have been amply explained elsewhere in this topic.

  7. What I want to know is... by Cyclopedian · · Score: 5, Funny
    Will Leonard Nimoy be spearheading the opening festivities?

    -Cyc

    1. Re:What I want to know is... by BitGeek · · Score: 2


      He'd better be for all the extra tax money we now are going to have to pay.

      Gas taxes in washington state are the highest in the nation-- never mind that the state spends something like %5 of its budget on transportation.

      They could double the transportion budget, cut other budgets by a small amount and not require any new taxes to pay for the monorail... but NO, that would be giving us our money's worth!

      (And if you're wondering why the state budget should be involved when the monorail is seattle only-- well, the GAS tax is a state wide tax!)

      Its absurd-- more government incompetence, and gullible voters who put up with it.

      Luckily one other tax measure failed and one tax rollback measure succeeded.

      The tide is turning.

      --
      Yeah, and you guys panned the ipod too: http://apple.slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=01/10/23/ 1816257
    2. Re:What I want to know is... by Xerithane · · Score: 2

      Gas taxes in washington state are the highest in the nation-- never mind that the state spends something like %5 of its budget on transportation.

      I drive to Washington to get gas. I live in Oregon. It is about $0.10 cheaper per gallon at Shell, and about $0.07 cheaper at Chevron. I don't think their taxes are that high.

      --
      Dacels Jewelers can't be trusted.
    3. Re:What I want to know is... by ScuzzMonkey · · Score: 2

      Well, our stations don't have labor costs of keeping some poor, unschooled schmuck around to pump the gas for you; cost savings passed on to you, the consumer!

      God bless Washington--a place where a man can stand tall and pump his own damn gas!

      --
      No relation to Happy Monkey
    4. Re:What I want to know is... by Xerithane · · Score: 2

      Well, our stations don't have labor costs of keeping some poor, unschooled schmuck around to pump the gas for you; cost savings passed on to you, the consumer!

      God bless Washington--a place where a man can stand tall and pump his own damn gas!


      So I'm not really a native to Oregon, so this was really confusing to me. I went and looked it up, and they cannot charge extra for having to pump the gas. It cannot be included in the price of the gas. Seems rather stupid, and I don't know if the actual stations follow it or not but it's rather retarded that people can't pump their own gas.

      Of course, in some of the more rural areas of Oregon I wouldn't want them handling gasoline either...

      --
      Dacels Jewelers can't be trusted.
    5. Re:What I want to know is... by ScuzzMonkey · · Score: 2

      I was mostly being flippant, but I don't see how that wouldn't have to be passed along in the price somehow. I mean, really, how else could you pay for the labor? Gas sales must be the majority of sales at gas stations, even the convenience store types... how could they avoid passing the cost along and still somehow stay in business?

      I've always noticed better prices on the Washington side of the border (was just down there last weekend, in fact) as well, and other than the labor factor, I can't understand what the difference could be.

      --
      No relation to Happy Monkey
    6. Re:What I want to know is... by Xerithane · · Score: 1

      I was mostly being flippant, but I don't see how that wouldn't have to be passed along in the price somehow. I mean, really, how else could you pay for the labor? Gas sales must be the majority of sales at gas stations, even the convenience store types... how could they avoid passing the cost along and still somehow stay in business?

      Well, the gas attendants are also the ones who run the convenience stores. They are multipurpose. At the smaller stations in Washington they have one attendant working. Same in Oregon, they are just busier. If you are paying for an attendant no matter what (whether they are pumping or not) you may as well have them work harder and pump some gas.

      I personally prefer pumping my own gas, as I've had people damage my car putting gas into it (spilling gas on the paint, and not cleaning it) and I just don't trust them.

      --
      Dacels Jewelers can't be trusted.
    7. Re:What I want to know is... by juan2074 · · Score: 1

      Washington state has never had the highest gas taxes in the nation. That is a myth.

    8. Re:What I want to know is... by ScuzzMonkey · · Score: 2

      I wasn't thinking of the small ones so much--the thing is, even at large, busy Washington stations, there's usually still only one person working. In Oregon, that doesn't seem to be the case--someone to watch the till, and one or two guys out running around pumping gas. Where do you come up with those extra two salaries, if not from your main source of revenue (gas, presumably)?

      --
      No relation to Happy Monkey
    9. Re:What I want to know is... by Xerithane · · Score: 1

      I wasn't thinking of the small ones so much--the thing is, even at large, busy Washington stations, there's usually still only one person working. In Oregon, that doesn't seem to be the case--someone to watch the till, and one or two guys out running around pumping gas. Where do you come up with those extra two salaries, if not from your main source of revenue (gas, presumably)?

      Most of the large gas stations have at least 2. Sometimes more, because a lot of the large stations have 2+ full service pumps. I don't think that there is actually a large difference in number of employees between same-sized filling stations across Washington and Oregon. Now I'm going to have to find out... damnit.

      Do you live in PDX?

      --
      Dacels Jewelers can't be trusted.
    10. Re:What I want to know is... by cheese_wallet · · Score: 1, Offtopic

      "God bless Washington--a place where a man can stand tall and pump his own damn gas!"

      You must have an SUV. I have to stoop over to pump my gas.

    11. Re:What I want to know is... by DunbarTheInept · · Score: 2

      they cannot charge extra for having to pump the gas. It cannot be included in the price of the gas.


      So are the pump attendants unpaid then?

      No?

      Then you ARE paying for them at the pump. They just aren't allowed to itemize it explicitly as a seperate thing on the receipt. Unless the gas station is operating in the red, you betcha some of that money eventually ends up paying the pump attendants. That's the only possible way to do it unless their pay is part of some state welfare program.

      The whole mandatory gas attendant thing seems silly to me. And Oregon's not the only place. The first time I saw it was when visiting New Jersey, and I thought it was just part of the oddity of New Jersey. I didn't know it was a common phenomenon.
      --

      Don't label something "offtopic" unless you know the topic well enough to tell what's on topic.

    12. Re:What I want to know is... by Xerithane · · Score: 1

      Then you ARE paying for them at the pump. They just aren't allowed to itemize it explicitly as a seperate thing on the receipt. Unless the gas station is operating in the red, you betcha some of that money eventually ends up paying the pump attendants. That's the only possible way to do it unless their pay is part of some state welfare program.

      What I was saying, and I'm sure you gathered this and are just arguing for the sake of, is gas stations are not allowed to increase the cost of gas purely for the gas attendants salaries. They'd go out of business around here even if they did as everyone would just drive to Washington.

      The whole mandatory gas attendant thing seems silly to me. And Oregon's not the only place. The first time I saw it was when visiting New Jersey, and I thought it was just part of the oddity of New Jersey. I didn't know it was a common phenomenon.

      AFAIK, this may have changed since I last looked, these are the only two where it is illegal to pump your own gas.

      --
      Dacels Jewelers can't be trusted.
    13. Re:What I want to know is... by brokenbeaker · · Score: 1

      Gasoline prices in the US are cheapest in the world, so these complaints sound very thin on the ears of those living outside the USA. This, combined with the gross overuse of energy in the USA, and ridiculous amount of pollution there, leads me to applaud Seattle and Washington State for taking steps to lessen their energy and pollution impact.

    14. Re:What I want to know is... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Damn, did everyone miss the Simpsons reference?

    15. Re:What I want to know is... by BitGeek · · Score: 1, Flamebait



      What a startling and fundamental ignorance of economics this post represents.

      Fucking liberals.

      Yeah the gas station attendants salaries magically appear. The price of the gas does not take keeping them on the payroll into account, right?

      No wonder you guys think governments should be allowed to force companies to charge less than cost for things (like electricity.)

      --
      Yeah, and you guys panned the ipod too: http://apple.slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=01/10/23/ 1816257
    16. Re:What I want to know is... by BitGeek · · Score: 3, Funny


      I see, you're getting taken to the cleaners to keep politicians stocked up on whores and you think we should be too? Well we are, already.

      Doesn't make it RIGHT.

      Oh, and the government doesn't do SQUAT about pollution. Except lie about it and create more of it-- the biggest threat to the environment in this country is the government's bad management of it.

      --
      Yeah, and you guys panned the ipod too: http://apple.slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=01/10/23/ 1816257
    17. Re:What I want to know is... by brokenbeaker · · Score: 1

      I see, you're getting taken to the cleaners to keep the executives of GM, Shell etc. stocked up on whores, and you think I should too?

      It's really ironic that you take no responsibility for your own actions. The millions of cars, the polluting power plants, that's all the government's fault, right?

    18. Re:What I want to know is... by ScuzzMonkey · · Score: 2

      Nah, I live in Seattle... was in Portland last weekend though, which is what occassioned the comment.

      From strictly random observation, it seemed to me like busy stations down there had two or three people working (one inside and one or two outside manning the pumps), while the two very busy gas stations down the street from me, here in Seattle, only have one person on even during the evening rush hour--just sitting behind the counter, raking in the cash. So, that's where I'm seeing a difference in staffing.

      --
      No relation to Happy Monkey
    19. Re:What I want to know is... by ScuzzMonkey · · Score: 2

      Or I'm just really short. Or you're too tall. Or some combination of the three... :)

      --
      No relation to Happy Monkey
    20. Re:What I want to know is... by Xerithane · · Score: 1

      ...while the two very busy gas stations down the street from me, here in Seattle, only have one person on even during the evening rush hour--just sitting behind the counter, raking in the cash. So, that's where I'm seeing a difference in staffing.

      Strange, the main filling station I use in Vancouver has 2 people working always (Except once or twice when I was there). Even around midnight when you don't see hardly any cars.

      --
      Dacels Jewelers can't be trusted.
    21. Re:What I want to know is... by Xerithane · · Score: 1

      Easy there hos. You obviously need to take a deep breath and understand that this is not some zany liberal movement. Oregon has had this law since before you were born, would be my guess.

      What a startling and fundamental ignorance of economics this post represents.
      How does my post illustrate fundamental ignorance of economics? Are you really that stupid? Here is economics for you: Gas station in Oregon charges $0.30 more for the attendant, doesn't get any business because everyone just goes to Washington instead. How's that for economics?

      Yeah the gas station attendants salaries magically appear. The price of the gas does not take keeping them on the payroll into account, right?
      If you had one iota of a clue of how it worked over here you would know it isn't even a choice for them to raise the price of gas to take care of the increased salaries from the attendants. People would go 5 minutes to Washington.

      No wonder you guys think governments should be allowed to force companies to charge less than cost for things (like electricity.)
      Us guys? Who the hell are you talking to? You don't know me, you don't know my views. Maybe you should clarify this. That would require you not being a jackass though.

      Do the world a favor, kill yourself, you obviously can't contribute anything worthwhile if your post is any sign of who you are. Your contribution to the economy can be not being a burden on it.

      --
      Dacels Jewelers can't be trusted.
    22. Re:What I want to know is... by DunbarTheInept · · Score: 2

      What a startling and fundamental ignorance of economics this post represents.

      Fucking liberals.


      Fucking knee-jerk idiots assuming knowlege of economics automatically makes one not a liberal, assuming by implication that anyone agreeing with the conservative agenda in terms of budgets must necessarily also agree with it in terms of the stuffy religious bullcrap that comes with it.
      --

      Don't label something "offtopic" unless you know the topic well enough to tell what's on topic.

    23. Re:What I want to know is... by DunbarTheInept · · Score: 2

      If you had one iota of a clue of how it worked over here you would know it isn't even a choice for them to raise the price of gas to take care of the increased salaries from the attendants. People would go 5 minutes to Washington.

      If you had one iota of a clue you'd realize that an Oregon state law actually applies to all of Oregon, much of which is more than 5 minutes away from the border with Washington.
      --

      Don't label something "offtopic" unless you know the topic well enough to tell what's on topic.

    24. Re:What I want to know is... by Xerithane · · Score: 1

      If you had one iota of a clue you'd realize that an Oregon state law actually applies to all of Oregon, much of which is more than 5 minutes away from the border with Washington.

      And if you had a clue, you would understand that out of 5 large cities (ones that would require more than one attendant on duty) in Oregon, only 3 are more than an hour from another state.

      Most of Oregon is incredibly rural, with towns averaging in size of about 10,000. With 3-4 stations per town, they are never too busy with only having one attendant.

      If you don't have anything intelligent, or informed (as you don't seem to have a clue about Oregon), don't contribute. It's ok to just let a thread go by without adding your (irrelevant and uniformed) opinion.

      --
      Dacels Jewelers can't be trusted.
    25. Re:What I want to know is... by cheese_wallet · · Score: 1, Offtopic

      Or, perhaps I am of average height with really short arms. hehe.

    26. Re:What I want to know is... by BitGeek · · Score: 2


      Yep, you did show your prejudice.

      Anyone who understands economics will NOT be a liberal.

      That doesn't mean they buy the far right wing anti-human rights junk, though.

      Anyone who DOES believe in it had better not vote democrat, though, after all 2/3 of them and their president voted to criminalize gay marriage.

      If you knew economics, you'd be a republican or libertarian.

      If you cared about human rights, you'd be a libertarian.

      Thinking the democrats support human rights is pretty damn stupid-- George Bush has a better record on Gay rights than clinton does.

      Either way, Libertarians are the only ones who really support them.

      --
      Yeah, and you guys panned the ipod too: http://apple.slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=01/10/23/ 1816257
    27. Re:What I want to know is... by BitGeek · · Score: 2


      Hay! You're funny.

      You're the one who thinks the salaries for gas station attendents magically appears out of nowhere and isn't built into the price of gas.

      That's just plain blunt headed stupidity.

      And you think I'm not productive to society? What the hell do you think makes me so pissed about taxes? Seeing tens of thousands of my hard earned dollars wasted every year giving idiots like you a non-education, is a good start.

      But thank you for standing behind the magic money theory-- I've never gotten a liberal to do it, they always say they don't but their math never adds up. (Another product of our fine educational system- idiots who can't add.)

      --
      Yeah, and you guys panned the ipod too: http://apple.slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=01/10/23/ 1816257
    28. Re:What I want to know is... by BitGeek · · Score: 2


      This from the guy who thinks the money to pay gas station attendents just magically appears.

      Cause they couldn't charge for it in the gas, now could they?? Naw, its against the law!

      I'm not sure which is worse- the politicians who believed this nonsense or that you still do- even though you have to pay more for gas than you would have otherwise.

      IF it isn't worth your time going to Washintgon, the ONLY reason is washington has much higher gas taxes. Otherwise, being able to pump it yourself has got to be worth $0.10 a gallon.

      --
      Yeah, and you guys panned the ipod too: http://apple.slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=01/10/23/ 1816257
    29. Re:What I want to know is... by BitGeek · · Score: 2


      Yep, you are ignorant. I'm not getting taken to the cleaners by GM or Shell-- I've never done business with them.

      And any large company in america would never allow wasting money on whores. Politicians do because they aren't accountable to anyone. Companies don't because the shareholders wouldn't stand for it.

      AS to pollution, the government is FAR AND AWAY The single largest polluter in the country. REduce the size of government by %20 and you would cut more pollution than the EPA has cut in TOTAL in its entire existence.)

      But then, those are facts, and liberals prefer myths-- and ridiculing people who point out the facts to actual scientifically based environmental policy.

      Big surprise.

      --
      Yeah, and you guys panned the ipod too: http://apple.slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=01/10/23/ 1816257
    30. Re:What I want to know is... by BitGeek · · Score: 2


      Furthermore, this idea that taxes are "taking responsibility for your own actions" is offensive.

      If the government was using those taxes to clean up the environment, or something then MAYBE you would have a case (but only if you could show that I wouldn't financially support such a plan without government FORCING me to.)

      Actually, I take total responsibility for my actions and don't want the governments "help" -- government is pretty much everywhere an unelected oppressive regime that puts on puppet elections every couple years (being sure to run news tories about how the iraqi people get to vote and how false those elections are) that goes around stealing money from people by force and wasting it on whores and whisky and petty programs to keep them in power.

      All governments, almost, are as corrupt as the soviet union was, run for the smae puprose, and evil for the same reasons.

      The only difference is they haven't destroyed their economy- YET. The europeans with thier high tax rates are pretty close-- you wonder why all the innovation is done in america? But the US isn't that far behind.

      --
      Yeah, and you guys panned the ipod too: http://apple.slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=01/10/23/ 1816257
    31. Re:What I want to know is... by brokenbeaker · · Score: 1

      It's pretty sad to see someone retort to name calling when they are unhappy about what they are hearing.

      In case you did not understand, GM and Shell are EXAMPLES of large multinational corporations. Unless you are living in complete isolation you are dealing with them, directly or indirectly. If you don't think you are, I think you are mistaken.

      You claim that corporations would not waste money on whores, because shareholders would not stand for it. I guess you've never heard of ENRON, and the amount of corruption there. Well, perhaps you didn't trust what was reported, since it was the government that uncovered that mess.

      I agree with you that the US government, particularly its military, are huge polluters. However, you cannot discount the pollution produced by individuals. Of course individual people are not the single largest polluter (duh), but there are hundreds of millions of them in the US, and the cheap energy prices makes them huge consumers and polluters.

      You claim to state facts, but you haven't substantiated anything that you wrote with evidence. As for claming to have no dealings with GM or Shell, I think it's you who is taken up by myth. I'm not sure who the liberal that you are mentioning is.

    32. Re:What I want to know is... by BitGeek · · Score: 2


      Well, since GM sells cars, and I've never owned one, and Shell sells gasoline, and I haven't gone to a shell station since the era of apartheid protest, I know that I don't do business with them.

      At any rate, they are irrelevant because they aren't the ones that set tax policy.

      Furthermore, that you bring up ENRON, as if it MEANS ANYTHING shows that you're arguing from a position of ideology, not facts. ENRON victimized its employees, and shareholders, was caught and quickly dealt with.

      The government (Which by the way, prevented uncovering the enron fraud by about 4 years due to incompetence) is at issue here.

      And those gas taxes do not go to clean up pollution, as you seem to think. The government does actually, almost nothing about pollution.

      Basically your position is the government can do no wrong because YOU PERSONALLY don't like big companies-- which is silly as well because without them, you wouldn't have a job.

      If you want to make an arugment, make it, but invoking company names as if that sufficed as some sort of an argument doesn't cut it.

      The government's mismanagmeent of money-- far in excess of the enron fraud- and affecting EVERYONE because EVERYONE is forced to pay taxes-- is far worse a crime. Hell, social security alone has destroyed the retirements of far more people than Enron-- something on the order of 3 trillion dollars wasted by that program.

      Merely letting people have that money to do with as they wish would have resulted in a far more effective solution to the perceived problem of poverty in retired people.

      But socialists, ever ignorant of economics, will always endorse government programs that cause poverty-- either because they agree with the real agenda behind them (which is CONTROL over people, eg tyranny) or because they are too stupid to realize they don't work.

      You'd think the collapse of the USSR and the relative poor performance of europe's economy -- hell you live there! -- would be a clue, but apparently it isn't.

      --
      Yeah, and you guys panned the ipod too: http://apple.slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=01/10/23/ 1816257
    33. Re:What I want to know is... by brokenbeaker · · Score: 1

      Please stop making up stuff. And please read my comments if you are going to respond to my posts.

      "Well, since GM sells cars, and I've never owned one, and Shell sells gasoline, and I haven't gone to a shell station since the era of apartheid protest, I know that I don't do business with them."

      I wrote that GM and Shell were examples of big corporations, and you still insist on saying you never had any dealings with these particular companies.

      You've never owned a vehicle - that's great. You still "deal" with car companies because all the stuff you buy in stores are shipped using trucks, vans etc. You still "deal" with oil companies because they provide energy for such vehicles, power plants etc. You seem to be unable to deal with a degree of abstraction.

      Getting back to my original point, which you never adressed. Americans love their cars. Their energy costs are incredibly low. This combination causes a huge amount of pollution. Recent trend towards the buying of SUVs etc. has led to lower efficiencies in gas consumption. This is why the construction of some public transport project will help reduce pollution.

      "Furthermore, that you bring up ENRON, as if it MEANS ANYTHING shows that you're arguing from a position of ideology, not facts. ENRON victimized its employees, and shareholders, was caught and quickly dealt with."

      Again, please adress what I wrote. You claimed that government had a monopoly on corruption, and I gave Enron as a counter example. In this case, Enron does mean something: Corporations can be corrupt. Again, this was a counter example to your thinking that corporations can do nothing wrong, since they have shareholders. Can you please respond to the whole of my argument, and not the bits and pieces that you choose to attack?

      "Basically your position is the government can do no wrong because YOU PERSONALLY don't like big companies-- which is silly as well because without them, you wouldn't have a job."

      I never claimed that the government can do no wrong. For example, in my last post, I agreed with you that they are a big source of pollution. Why do you insist on trying to dictate what I think? If you read any of my posts, which I am seriously beginning to doubt, you would see that I applauded a particular action by one government to set up public transport. From this you conclude that I think government can do no wrong. By what feat of reasoning did you accomplish this?

      You are right, I don't like big companies. Their sole motive is profit, and I think this is dangerous, since anything else becomes subservient to their goal of maximizing profits: environment, human rights, communities etc. To suggest that there would be no jobs without big companies is just dumb - unless you have some evidence to convince me otherwise.

      I agree that any government will mismanage money. I don't see how eliminating taxes will improve on this, though. (Is that what you meant by "Merely letting people have that money to do with as they wish would have resulted in a far more effective solution to the perceived problem of poverty in retired people."? - i'm not sure what "that money" is or why you started talking about retirees, either...)

      "But socialists, ever ignorant of economics, will always endorse government programs that cause poverty-- either because they agree with the real agenda behind them (which is CONTROL over people, eg tyranny) or because they are too stupid to realize they don't work."

      Anyone who believes dogmatically in a philosophy is bound to fail, because they will not be living in the world of facts. Your comment sounds just as dogmatic as the practice you are criticizing: All socialists are ignorant of economics, all social programs cause poverty, socialism is about tyranny. The world is not black and white like you make it out to be.

      "You'd think the collapse of the USSR and the relative poor performance of europe's economy -- hell you live there! -- would be a clue, but apparently it isn't."

      For one thing, I don't live in Europe, so, again, please stop making stuff up. As to what the collapse of the USSR, or the economy of Europe would be a clue to, please enlighten me.

    34. Re:What I want to know is... by BitGeek · · Score: 2


      Uh, there are other companies that make cars besides GM, geeze. I have owned cars, but never done business with GM. I deal with oil companies too- I buy gas for my car. What's your point? You don't seem to have one. You seem to be trying to say that I'm evil because I buy these products or that these companies are evil-- well, that's your bigotry so I'm not surprised you'd say that.

      I can handle abstraction, you're just being an idiot, that's all.

      Sorry, your logic doesn't make any sense- low gas prices are not the cause of pollution in this country, and in fact, there is very little pollution problems from private vehicles. Right or wrong, they have been constructed to minimize emissions and thus the pollution problems of the 70s are gone.

      Your understanding of the facts, or your thinking is very simplistic.

      These public transit facilities-- REMEMBER I LIVE IN THIS CITY!-- Will not reduce car usage by ONE SINGLE CAR. They are projected to have zero impact on the traffic situation. They will reduce the number of busses needed, allowing the busses that currently serve the downtown area to serve the suburbs instead. I love how you're commenting on public transit programs you know nothing about.

      I'd be happy to respond to the whole of your argument-- if you ever made one. This is whats frustrating about you liberal types -you refuse to EVER make an argument, you just invoke names like ENRON as if doing THAT was an argument-- its not.

      Never said the government had a monopoly on corruption-- just that when Enron is corrupt, it gets caught and rectified quickly. the social security fraud has been going on for 50 years- nobody has an opportunity to opt out of it, and it is a total fraud. So, when you really want corruption you have to rely on the government.

      Funny how I acknowledge that companies can be immoral, but you think they can be nothing but-- and think the government-- which historically is the source of most immorality in the world, and the slaughters of more people in toto than individuals or companies combined. When you want to kill a hundred million people, you need a government- yet you love government and hate companies, wonder why.

      No, it is you who are ignorant of facts, and your moral relativism is disgusting-- that is the attitude that leads to GENOCIDE.

      ALL SOCIALISTS ARE IGNORANT OF ECONOMICS-- and as a result, they kill millions if not tens of millions of people when they have the power.

      That's not dogma, that's scientific fact. IF you knew anything about economics, you'd understand why I say this, but you don't, so its no wonder you're not listening.

      I've come to expect nothing more from socialists but such idiotic soundbites and non-arguments.

      The truth is, the profit motive has done more to protect human rights than any government EVER has. The violation of human rights is the sole purpose of government, and there is not a government on this planet that has not violated more human rights than even the WORST corporation.

      Maybe GM has mistreated a couple dozen workers, but the US governments as violated the human rights of 280 million citizens- and it does more of it every month than all the companies in the country do in a year, combined.

      If you really believed in human rights, you'd stop advocating their abolition.

      Historically, the profit motive is the single best way to insure fairness, and quality of services at a decent price. Governments always abuse people physically, take away human rights, and insure poverty.

      IF you knew the history of the USSR and Europe, you'd know this-- our poorer population group is richer than their middle classes.

      --
      Yeah, and you guys panned the ipod too: http://apple.slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=01/10/23/ 1816257
    35. Re:What I want to know is... by brokenbeaker · · Score: 1

      This will be the last thing I write, because you are a lost cause. You haven't responded to anything that I wrote.

      You ask what is my point. My original point was that millions of individuals driving their individual cars makes a lot of pollution, and that public transport will lessen that pollution. If you're going to argue that's wrong, well, you are wrong.

      For the rest of your spewings, I hope that you are lucky enough not to become poor in the kind of world that you envison. (Hint. most people in the world are poor. you are just lucky.)

    36. Re:What I want to know is... by BitGeek · · Score: 2


      Yep, you are an idiot.

      First off, I HAVE been poor. I have been homeless and without a dollar to my name. Yet the government wasn't there and it was just lucky I didn't get seriously ill. The society I advocate is one where poor people would be far less likely to fall on those times and if they did, there would be MORE services there for them. so your little pissant comment about poverty is pathetic-- to quote the line from Platoon "Shit, you gotta be rich in the first place to even think like that".

      Secondly, the monorail and the RT system under discussion HERE will NOT do anything to decrease cars on the road-- this is according to their own studies. Remember, I live in the city, you dipshit.

      That you take your assumption as FACT over the statements of the people who propose the systems in question, shows you don't care about reality- you have an ideology based on bigotry and you don't care what the facts are.

      In other words, you're a stupid idiot who INSISTS on staying that way.

      You think I'm a lost cuase? Thats cause you're a menace to society.

      And, by the way, come try and take my human rights away in person, you gutless wonder, and you'll eat lead. That you advocate something you don't have the guts to enforce shows how low you really are-- not even human.

      Anyone who can laugh in the face of genocide and then continue to advocate it-- you deserve the pain you're creating for yourself.

      --
      Yeah, and you guys panned the ipod too: http://apple.slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=01/10/23/ 1816257
    37. Re:What I want to know is... by Xerithane · · Score: 1

      You're the one who thinks the salaries for gas station attendents magically appears out of nowhere and isn't built into the price of gas.
      Uhm, no I don't. I said that (as it used to be) gas stations were not allowed to put an increase in their gas price purely to pay the attendants salaries. There are plenty of places in Oregon where gas is cheaper than in Washington. Even in Portland (largest city in Oregon) it's about $0.20 cheaper a gallon than in the San Francisco Bay Area. Where's your magic salary now? It's not blunt headed stupidity, you are just illiterate.

      And you think I'm not productive to society? What the hell do you think makes me so pissed about taxes? Seeing tens of thousands of my hard earned dollars wasted every year giving idiots like you a non-education, is a good start.

      Yup, you have to be illiterate. I said that if your life was in any way reflected by your literacy skill than there is no way you could be productive. It seems as if you consume far more than you generate, because of your complete lack of reasoning or logic. If you get paid more than tens of thousands a year than I would say that your employers are getting ripped off.

      But thank you for standing behind the magic money theory-- I've never gotten a liberal to do it, they always say they don't but their math never adds up. (Another product of our fine educational system- idiots who can't add.)

      I'm sure my math skills are much more advanced than yours, considering your literary rate seems to be on par with the 8 year old neighbor I have.

      --
      Dacels Jewelers can't be trusted.
    38. Re:What I want to know is... by Xerithane · · Score: 1

      This from the guy who thinks the money to pay gas station attendents just magically appears.

      Cause they couldn't charge for it in the gas, now could they?? Naw, its against the law!


      You really are a bad troll. You are uninformed when I am informed. You should try something else, like self-lobotomization.

      I'm not sure which is worse- the politicians who believed this nonsense or that you still do- even though you have to pay more for gas than you would have otherwise.
      Wrong, California metro is more expensive by far than Portland metro.

      IF it isn't worth your time going to Washintgon, the ONLY reason is washington has much higher gas taxes. Otherwise, being able to pump it yourself has got to be worth $0.10 a gallon.

      I go to Washington 3-4 times a week, I save money by filling up there when I am up there. I prefer to pump my own gas, as I don't trust people with my car. I'm very fond of my car, and it would be very expensive to fix. If I fuck it up, it's my fault. If they fuck it up, I can sue them and probably get dicked.

      As for Washingtons taxes, what started this is someone saying Washington has the most tax. That's wrong, California is more expensive than Oregon which is more expensive than Washington. You do the math, and tell me how that works out even with the "magic" salaries.

      I'm assuming another illogical, retarded post is going to spew from you. Does it suck when most people are smarter farting than you when talking?

      --
      Dacels Jewelers can't be trusted.
    39. Re:What I want to know is... by DunbarTheInept · · Score: 2

      Your post operates under the false premise that the word "liberal" is synonymous with "Democratic Party". I wasn't using it that way. If you *do* use it that way, you are playing right into the Republicans' hands and not at all thinking like a libertarian. (Consider where the "liber" part of "libertarian" comes from for a second.) It's the Republican Party's tactic to tie together liberalism with the Democratic Party's practice of overspending, as if the two were cosmically tied together, thereby tricking people into thinking that to oppose excessive spending they must oppose liberal *moral* policies as well, and be a good little Fascist.

      And, incedentally, George Bush has zero record on Gay rights, and neither does Clinton. Those sorts of things aren't decided at the presidential level.

      --

      Don't label something "offtopic" unless you know the topic well enough to tell what's on topic.

    40. Re:What I want to know is... by DunbarTheInept · · Score: 2
      I'd have thought that even you could grasp the notion that one hour is not equal to five minutes. Your post to which I replied did not make the claim that someone could drive ONE HOUR to Washington to get cheaper gas if there was a price difference. It made the claim that one could drive FIVE MINUTES to Washington to do so. Even for most people living in Portland that wouldn't be true.

      Nice try.


      If you don't have anything intelligent, or informed (as you don't seem to have a clue about Oregon), don't contribute. It's ok to just let a thread go by without adding your (irrelevant and uniformed) opinion.

      And you can't seem to remember from one post to the next what your argument actually was.

      Nice try.

      --

      Don't label something "offtopic" unless you know the topic well enough to tell what's on topic.

    41. Re:What I want to know is... by Xerithane · · Score: 1

      And you can't seem to remember from one post to the next what your argument actually was.

      What was my argument? I never had an argument. It's your dumb ass that turned a simple statement into something it wasn't.

      Fact of the matter is this: Gas is cheaper in Washington (Vancouver) than in Portland. However, in middle of Oregon it often isn't. Gas is also cheaper in Oregon than it is in California.

      As far as I knew, which I had heard, gas stations were not allowed to increase the cost of gas and itemize attendants based off of it.

      I'm not sure why your quest is to troll me (this is the second time attempting) but you really should try to get a new hobby. You don't win, then you try to proclaim that I lost when you have nothing more to argue because you don't know jack shit about what you attempt to speak about. It's pretty convenient, isn't it? Speak up about a topic you know nothing about, then say you won. I wish life actually worked that way, it'd be much easier.

      Go move out of your parents basement and experience reality.

      --
      Dacels Jewelers can't be trusted.
    42. Re:What I want to know is... by DunbarTheInept · · Score: 2

      Yout think you're winning the argument?

      What color is the sky on your planet?

      --

      Don't label something "offtopic" unless you know the topic well enough to tell what's on topic.

    43. Re:What I want to know is... by Xerithane · · Score: 1

      Yout think you're winning the argument?

      There is no argument. That's why I'm winning, you are just apparently to thick-headed to understand this.

      Let me recap:
      Someone said Washington state had the highest taxes on gas. I said that a lot of people from Portland and Salem drive to Washington to fill up because on average it is cheaper, and I recall someone saying that the gas stations couldn't itemize the attendants salaries in the cost of the gas. Now, it doesn't seem logical that Washington has the highest gas tax because it is on average about $0.30 cheaper in Washington than in California. Maybe there are other factors, but I doubt it's gas tax. I was not arguing that they were wrong, I don't know how gas tax works. I wasn't saying the pump attendants salary was magical and just appeared, only that I had heard that it wasn't allowed to be itemized into the price of the gas.

      All you have said is I don't have a clue about economics, and stating I believe some magic money gets delivered to the gas stations when I never said such things. You also seem to be completely bent on not reading what I'm writing, only repeating yourself. Then, when there was absolutely no way that you could sound logical by repeating yourself, claim victory.

      Yup, you sure are a winner. I bet your mother is beaming with pride.

      --
      Dacels Jewelers can't be trusted.
    44. Re:What I want to know is... by DunbarTheInept · · Score: 2

      I wasn't saying the pump attendants salary was magical and just appeared, only that I had heard that it wasn't allowed to be itemized into the price of the gas.

      First lie. You said they can't charge more for it. Whether or not they can itemize it on the bill is a second issue you only took up after someone else pointed out that that's all the law really entails.

      All you have said is I don't have a clue about economics

      Second lie. That was someone else, not me.

      You also seem to be completely bent on not reading what I'm writing

      You apparently attribute other people's posts to me, so speak for yourself.

      --

      Don't label something "offtopic" unless you know the topic well enough to tell what's on topic.

    45. Re:What I want to know is... by Xerithane · · Score: 1
      First lie. You said they can't charge more for it. Whether or not they can itemize it on the bill is a second issue you only took up after someone else pointed out that that's all the law really entails.


      They cannot charge more, for the gas, as itemized. That's not a lie, that's clarification. Go find a dictionary.

      Second lie. That was someone else, not me.


      Sort of correct, your statements consisted of me believing they were unpaid or magic money, or saying that stations outside of the outer-state regions are operating differently. No statement I made reflected any view like that. Those statements can pretty much be surmised as you saying I have no clue about economics. You and BitGeek were pretty much spouting the same innane bullshit.

      You apparently attribute other people's posts to me, so speak for yourself.

      No, but yours and BitGeeks were pretty much the same posts. Completely stupid, pointless, and attempting to argue a point that doesn't even exist. Here's an excercise: List your argument against what I've said, in a nice bullet list.

      Everything from what I have said iterates down, you claimed I changed my argument which is complete bunk. There was no change.

      As I said to you previously, you seem somehow motivated to argue with me. Well, there is no argument here. I don't know 100% sure if they are not allowed to itemize the station attendants into the price per galon, but from what I have looked into it seems that is the case. I stand by that. I may be wrong. So what? You aren't even arguing that. Hell, you haven't even argued. You have just insulted me (in rather irrelevant manners) and trying to claim I lie and am losing an argument that doesn't exist.

      The only argument is this: You are obviously pissed off at me for something, and I have no idea why. Maybe you don't like my posts, maybe you just don't like me. I really don't care. I won't care. If you don't like me, oh well, join the crowd. It's called personal preference. What I don't understand is why you devote time towards attempting to argue a non-existent point (It really doesn't exist, you got into this deep long thread attempting to bash me, over a simple sentance: I went and looked it up, and they cannot charge extra for having to pump the gas. It cannot be included in the price of the gas.

      Everything that you have devoted into this attempt to prove me wrong goes into that one single sentence. Don't you feel a bit silly and absurd at carrying it this far?

      Your original statement is much more absurd than mine by far:
      Then you ARE paying for them at the pump. They just aren't allowed to itemize it explicitly as a seperate thing on the receipt. Unless the gas station is operating in the red, you betcha some of that money eventually ends up paying the pump attendants. That's the only possible way to do it unless their pay is part of some state welfare program.

      That's pretty much what I said above. They aren't allowed to itemize it explicitely as a seperate thing on the receipt. In other words, "It cannot be included in the price of the gas."

      My next post to you, stated you were just trying to pick a fight. Pretty accurate, wouldn't you say? Again, it reiterates what I was saying. And what you said, but without the "I'm trying to pick a fight with you" smart ass remark.

      Next down in our little thread, you respond to a comment I wrote to BitGeek. Saying that Oregon Law went through all Oregon, with more insulting remarks towards me. Fine, insult me. Now, I'm not sure what part of what I said actually caused you to get involved with that fine literary gem you posted. It was a pointless post anyway, as the rest of Oregon is very rural. Filling stations only need one, at most two in the "rush", attendant which any station would need anyway.

      The next threads are you just insulting me, and not saying anything. More of the wonderful "I obviously don't understand economics" posts.

      Up until your direct insult against me, I was mostly friendly. Just requesting that you stay out of a thread that you shouldn't participate in.
      It wasn't until you have proved yourself to be without logic and reason (otherwise you wouldn't have been responding arguing something that wasn't even there) that I called you a dumbass. I'll stand by that still, as it still seems to be the case. I don't hold grudges, you may be smart. I hope so, because the world doesn't need more stupid people. From my experiences with you, it shows the opposite.

      If you have an issue with me, take it up with me. If you don't want to talk to me, than fine, stop trying to argue with me. If you don't like me, put me on your foes list, set me to -6 and pretend I don't exist. It's not that hard.

      In all fairness, and seriousness, lets just get whatever grudge you have against me out so you can get it off your chest and not get into long threads talking about things that don't even matter. If you don't want to, then please, just set me as a foe, and ignore me.

      This long winded post has been brought to you by the unfathomable build times of QT on a Pentium II-400Mhz CPU. That failed. Twice.
      --
      Dacels Jewelers can't be trusted.
  8. That's a good start by GeckoFood · · Score: 3, Funny

    Seattle Monorail & California High Speed Rail Move Forward

    Now if they could just get the damn things to actually stop when they get to a destination...

    --
    Be excellent to each other. And... PARTY ON, DUDES!
  9. *grrr* by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Monorail! Monorail! *BANG BANG*

    (sound of non-original-thinking-he's funny-Slashdot-reader-hitting-the-ground)

    I hated that show. And YOU, beowulf boy. Don't EVEN! (aiming)

  10. California? by Cryptnotic · · Score: 1, Flamebait

    I thought Gov. Gray Davis (www.egray.com) gave all of California's money to Enron.

    --
    My other first post is car post.
    1. Re:California? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Um, no, that would be our the official appointed to run this country. (Mr. Bush)

  11. Bad Parody courtesy of me by Migelikor1 · · Score: 5, Funny

    [Anonymous Coward] I hear those things are awfully loud.
    [Article] It glides as softly as a cloud
    [Enginerd] Is there a chance the track could bend?
    [Article] Not on your life, my Slashdot friend
    [Frequent poster] Why Seattle, those braindead slobs?
    [Article] There were only so many Starbucks jobs
    [Oil Companies] Were you sent here by the devil?
    [Article] No, good sir, I'm on the level
    [Cowboy Neal] I feel attracted to a man.
    [Article] Go outside and get a tan!
    I swear it's Seattle's only choice
    Throw up your hands and raise your voice!
    Monorail!
    What's it called?
    Monorail!
    Once again!
    Monorail!
    [Poster] But our educational system's all cracked and broken
    [re;] Sorry, man, the mob has spoken
    [All] Monorail! Monorail!
    Monorail!
    Monorail!
    [Homer] Mono- d'oh!

    This terrible parody brought to you by a bored college student.

    --
    My Karma is so good, I'm the Dalai Lama...or something.
    1. Re:Bad Parody courtesy of me by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Waddayamean you only gave this a score of 2?!?! It deserves at least a 4 with Funny besides it :)

    2. Re:Bad Parody courtesy of me by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      THE MOTIVES OF SCIENTISTS
      87. Science and technology provide the most important examples of surrogate activities. Some scientists claim that they are motivated by "curiosity," that notion is simply absurd. Most scientists work on highly specialized problem that are not the object of any normal curiosity. For example, is an astronomer, a mathematician or an entomologist curious about the properties of isopropyltrimethylmethane? Of course not. Only a chemist is curious about such a thing, and he is curious about it only because chemistry is his surrogate activity. Is the chemist curious about the appropriate classification of a new species of beetle? No. That question is of interest only to the entomologist, and he is interested in it only because entomology is his surrogate activity. If the chemist and the entomologist had to exert themselves seriously to obtain the physical necessities, and if that effort exercised their abilities in an interesting way but in some nonscientific pursuit, then they couldn't giver a damn about isopropyltrimethylmethane or the classification of beetles. Suppose that lack of funds for postgraduate education had led the chemist to become an insurance broker instead of a chemist. In that case he would have been very interested in insurance matters but would have cared nothing about isopropyltrimethylmethane. In any case it is not normal to put into the satisfaction of mere curiosity the amount of time and effort that scientists put into their work. The "curiosity" explanation for the scientists' motive just doesn't stand up.

      88. The "benefit of humanity" explanation doesn't work any better. Some scientific work has no conceivable relation to the welfare of the human race - most of archaeology or comparative linguistics for example. Some other areas of science present obviously dangerous possibilities. Yet scientists in these areas are just as enthusiastic about their work as those who develop vaccines or study air pollution. Consider the case of Dr. Edward Teller, who had an obvious emotional involvement in promoting nuclear power plants. Did this involvement stem from a desire to benefit humanity? If so, then why didn't Dr. Teller get emotional about other "humanitarian" causes? If he was such a humanitarian then why did he help to develop the H-bomb? As with many other scientific achievements, it is very much open to question whether nuclear power plants actually do benefit humanity. Does the cheap electricity outweigh the accumulating waste and risk of accidents? Dr. Teller saw only one side of the question. Clearly his emotional involvement with nuclear power arose not from a desire to "benefit humanity" but from a personal fulfillment he got from his work and from seeing it put to practical use.

      89. The same is true of scientists generally. With possible rare exceptions, their motive is neither curiosity nor a desire to benefit humanity but the need to go through the power process: to have a goal (a scientific problem to solve), to make an effort (research) and to attain the goal (solution of the problem.) Science is a surrogate activity because scientists work mainly for the fulfillment they get out of the work itself.

      90. Of course, it's not that simple. Other motives do play a role for many scientists. Money and status for example. Some scientists may be persons of the type who have an insatiable drive for status (see paragraph 79) and this may provide much of the motivation for their work. No doubt the majority of scientists, like the majority of the general population, are more or less susceptible to advertising and marketing techniques and need money to satisfy their craving for goods and services. Thus science is not a PURE surrogate activity. But it is in large part a surrogate activity.

      91. Also, science and technology constitute a mass power movement, and many scientists gratify their need for power through identification with this mass movement (see paragraph 83).

      92. Thus science marches on blindly, without regard to the real welfare of the human race or to any other standard, obedient only to the psychological needs of the scientists and of the government officials and corporation executives who provide the funds for research.

  12. The Urbanaut by Felonius+Thunk · · Score: 2, Informative

    For really cool monorail tech, check out the Urbanaut. Its inventor is the designer of Seattle's original monorail. Why we in Seattle aren't going with his ideas for this new one, I don't know.

    1. Re:The Urbanaut by herrd0kt0r · · Score: 1, Troll

      i just gotta take the time and say _wow_. you used "its" correctly.

      you know things are in a sad state of affairs when reading "its" used correctly is eye-catching. it's pretty unusual these days.

      ah, yeah. mod me down. i have karma to burn. besides, you're the same mods who mod my funny posts that have little to do with furthering intelligent debate! c(0_o)D

      actually, lemme add something that _is_ relevant. it's pretty amazing and heartening to read that the voters in seattle were able to effect such a program, considering the dollar amounts that are involved. the fact that the vote was so close (94k vs 93k) might suggest that it was an issue that a lot of people knew about.

      in virginia, there's been this bitter struggle to get a crazy amount of dough approved for building more roads and causeways for the hampton roads area (near norfolk/virginia beach). it's crazy because part of the money was to go towards "looking into" mass transportation.

      the traffic here is nowhere near as bad as it is around northern virginia/washington dc. but it's getting worse. the hampton roads area consists of a handful of populated areas connected by highways. it would seem obvious that some sort of mass transportation should be developed, but there's a LOT of resistance.

      what's interesting is that the amount of money spent for the latest campaign to build up the roads and highways must've been astronomical. there were television commercials, print adverts, signs, freakin telemarketers calling from nebraska, etc., all to convince people to vote for a tax increase to build more roads.

      but really, mass transportation is the way to go, especially for this area. people commute 20 miles from va beach to norfolk, from norfolk to va beach, from this county to that-- most commuters travel 10-20 miles here. the chokepoints are bridges and tunnels that are needed to traverse the many canals, rivers and other maritime causeways.

      if we would frikking build some sort of mass transportation system, the whole area would prosper. people are just worried over the dollar amounts and have difficulty fathoming the length of time needed to actualize such an idea. which is why they'd rather wait just 10 years for more roads instead of 15+ for trains and monorails.

      doesn't make much sense. sigh. if only everyone were as intelligent as i am. or herr thunk. i think i'd be happy enough if people used "its," "it's," "your," and "your's" correctly. bah.

    2. Re:The Urbanaut by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Cool idea, but would not want to be in one when an earthquke strikes or a car hits a support.

    3. Re:The Urbanaut by Qrlx · · Score: 1

      yeah, you'll be much happier on the ship canal bridge or the aurora bridge when the quake comes. Actually I-5 is elevated through most of downtown. And don't forget the Viaduct, which is the one thing that might actually fall down in a quake. ptiy, it's such a great road and (shhh) usually there's NO TRAFFIC on it. Except for a mariners game or I suppose a seahawks game.

      My favorite place would be on the part of I-5 that isn't elevated, it's UNDER THE CONVENTION CENTER. Yeah...nothing's safer than having thousands of tons of concrete and steel above your head.

    4. Re:The Urbanaut by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Actually, I was thinking that a straddle beam monorail is not going to jump, whereas the urbanuat will jump at a small quake. Likewise, if a quake comes and tears down the monorail (very easy to make "quake-proof"), then I figure the rest of seattle is down anyways.

    5. Re:The Urbanaut by dknj · · Score: 1

      come on now, we have a maglev... that has ran out of money (i assume because of budget cuts) which left a dead car on the track and half completed maglev stops. go ODU go!

      -dk

    6. Re:The Urbanaut by herrd0kt0r · · Score: 2

      jawohl. but the good thing is that it still serves as a good proof-of-concept.

      for those who don't know: a short (very short) track maglev was build at old dominion university. really built. though the track really doesn't go anywhere to solve any mass transit problems, the mere fact that it was built is pretty amazing!

      monorails and maglevs are pretty expensive anyway. instead of building either, it is more frugal to invest in light rail options.

      but one cannot discount the significance of the maglev project. i am less familiar with the seattle monorail proposal that this story is about-- but as i mentioned in the post above this, i think the real story is in the fact that the grassroots campaign succeeded in getting the monorail project on the docket.

    7. Re:The Urbanaut by Alan+Partridge · · Score: 1

      pneumatic rubber tyres have been used by the French for fucking EVER. If you really want to see what happens when a country INVESTS in mass transport systems, look no further than Paris.

      They still have traffic jams and shitty parking though...

      --
      That was classic intercourse!
    8. Re:The Urbanaut by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      ACtually, they've got one a lot like this in Hiroshima, Japan.
      It's called, I kid you not, the Astram

    9. Re:The Urbanaut by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Light rail isn't inherently cheaper than monorail or mag lev, even on a cost-per-mile basis [it totally depends on the terrain and how built-up the area is you're dealing with]. In Seattle current estimates show light rail and monorail fairly close on a per-mile year-of-expenditure basis, with monorail enjoying a reasonable advantage due to less land acquisition costs.

      The real advantage with monorail is automation. By not having to pay drivers on an annual basis, as the system matures and you pay off the construction costs you can actually operate break-even, if not at a profit. Vancouver's SkyTrain does that now, as do most of the Japanese monorail systems.

    10. Re:The Urbanaut by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What?!? Not only is the monorail very earthquake proof (Japan - land of earthquakes - and no problems with theirs), but even if a semi-truck were to hit those 3 foot wide steel columns, the truck would lose badly! Haven't you ever seen a car wrapped around a tree or telephone pole after some jerk ran off the road? They're tin cans.

      There's also this wonderful redundance in the monorail where each column can support the weight of the monorail yet you have several backup columns because they're all strung together by the track.

  13. Were you sent here by the devil? by ctar · · Score: 0, Redundant

    No good sir, I'm on the level!

    Mono - D'OH!

  14. Mono. DOH! by UnderScan · · Score: 1
  15. About time by foodb4nk · · Score: 0, Funny

    I wanna apply to be a MONORAIL DRIVER.

    --
    *huh* Sig? WTF?
    1. Re:About time by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      wouldn't you rather be in financial services? i hear it is just as important a field.

  16. North Haverbrook by cscx · · Score: 4, Funny

    Now where did I hear that name before...?

  17. Another Slashdot effect refrence by Lord_Slepnir · · Score: 0, Troll

    25 comments and it's already 404ing on me. I hope the computers on the monorail are more robust than this.

  18. fast rail in CA is a good thing... by ryochiji · · Score: 5, Interesting

    'cause Amtrak sucks. From where I am (Chico, CA), to go to Portland OR using Amtrak, it takes 14 hours and costs $100. In comparison, it takes 12 hours and costs $59 by Greyhound.

    I'm not sure if this new plan extends into Oregon, but still, when a bus is faster than a train, you know something's not right (of course, this is in comparison to other areas like Japan and Europe where there's a fairly developed network of high speed trains).

    1. Re:fast rail in CA is a good thing... by stefanlasiewski · · Score: 4, Informative

      I'm not sure if this new plan extends into Oregon,

      Oregon isn't in the recommended routes yet.

      But, if we get something going from LA -> Sacramento, I'm hoping that it will present enough of an incentive to go to the larger Oregonian cities on the way to Seattle.

      --
      "Can of worms? The can is open... the worms are everywhere."
    2. Re:fast rail in CA is a good thing... by Chasuk · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Amtrak sucks by design. The government apathy towards the commuter rail industry is too extreme to be accidental. I can't prove it, but I'd be willing to bet that huge payoffs are involved somewhere.

      I lived in England for many years, and caught a train into London three days a week. It wasn't cheap, but the prices weren't as inflated as Amtrak (relatively speaking), and I never had to look at schedules or make reservations. I showed up at the station and a stepped aboard a train which invariably arrived (yes, sometimes it was late), purchased my ticket, read my paper, sometimes ate breakfast or enjoyed a cup of tea, and all was bliss.

      Amtrak could do the same if they got anywhere near the same coddling that the airline industry receives.

    3. Re:fast rail in CA is a good thing... by theedge318 · · Score: 1

      Ok Greyhound is faster ... but the seats are smaller, the bathrooms reek, there is not snack/dinner car. Their little diner/depots along the way make you wish they served snacks in the toilet at the back of the bus. Amtrak may be more expensive than flying and busses (at least it on the East Coast) ... but at least you can get up and walk around whenever you want, and not have to trip over a stewardess, or worry about the fasten seatbelt sign.

      --
      Sig Nazi- "No Sig for you, come back 1 year."
    4. Re:fast rail in CA is a good thing... by thinmac · · Score: 2

      That's one thing that I can't find anywhere on the site, how much it will cost. Personally, I can see this is being really great if it's $50 or less round trip from the Bay Area to L.A. Likely, however, it's going to be targeted at business travelers, so I'd bet it'll be more like the $100 amtrak ticket.

      As for Portland, how many people make that trip? Bay Area to L.A. to Sacramento will get a whole lot of traffic on a daily basis. Heck, 2 hours is comperable to some of the commutes that people take from way out in Daneville or Tracy to San Francisco every day. I can see people commuting from Visalia to any of the three larger metro areas this will cover. Portland, though? I don't know anyone who travels there regularly. Maybe I'm off my mark, but I don't see that being a heavily traveled route.

    5. Re:fast rail in CA is a good thing... by stefanlasiewski · · Score: 2

      That's one thing that I can't find anywhere on the site, how much it will cost Personally, I can see this is being really great if it's $50 or less round trip from the Bay Area to L.A. Likely, however, it's going to be targeted at business travelers, so I'd bet it'll be more like the $100 amtrak ticket.

      They're still in some early planning stages. The ticket price won't be known until a good estimate of cost and funding is known.

      My guess is that the train tickets will be priced to compete with the commuter air tickets. So $100 or more (but without the wait time and full body cavity search).

      Heck, I'd still take the train even if it was slighly more expensive. Travelling by train is fun. No tight seats, you can walk around the train. I spent my last trainride reading a book and drinking beer in the lounge car, watching the beautiful sunset.

      --
      "Can of worms? The can is open... the worms are everywhere."
    6. Re:fast rail in CA is a good thing... by nurightshu · · Score: 5, Funny

      The government apathy towards the commuter rail industry is too extreme to be accidental.

      Just out of curiosity, how does one develop "extreme apathy?" Wouldn't that be like "record-breaking mediocrity?" Or is it an ESPN2 show for the lazy kids -- XTREME APATHY! This week: laying on the couch and not fucking moving! Also: highlights from the 2002 North American Shrugging Championship.

      --
      They that would sacrifice their .sig space for that cliched Franklin quote deserve neither.
    7. Re:fast rail in CA is a good thing... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's pretty obvious. Some obscene amount of money is spent on roads. And then Congress complains about how Amtrak isn't self-sufficient, when everyone else in the country takes advantage of all the subsidized roads.

    8. Re:fast rail in CA is a good thing... by swankypimp · · Score: 2

      Last winter I used Amtrak and Greyhound to tool around the West Coast visiting friends and relatives. I was told that Amtrak's passenger service is expensive and inefficient because its mostly an afterthought; they make most of their money out West by shipping light cargo (and mail, I think) between the big cities. IIRC, the only profitable passenger travel area they have is from D.C. to Boston (with presumably better service than the Sticks, North Dakotah to Bumwad, Iowa route), and get heavy government subsidies because East Coast politicians and their constituents use it to commute, Gregory Peck style.

      --

      --All your stolen base are belong to Rickey Henderson
    9. Re:fast rail in CA is a good thing... by Guido+del+Confuso · · Score: 1

      Yeah, whatever. Let's get out from under the enormous mountain of debt (not bloody likely, thanks to Gray 'Highest Bidder' Davis and his pinko cronies in Sacramento) before we even think about spending $10 billion on a high tech toy.

      I love how Californians complain about high taxes and then go out and vote for bond measure after bond measure, because "We need to save the environment!" or "We need to protect the children!"

    10. Re:fast rail in CA is a good thing... by FeloniousPunk · · Score: 1

      Amtrak sucks by design. The government apathy towards the commuter rail industry is too extreme to be accidental. I can't prove it, but I'd be willing to bet that huge payoffs are involved somewhere.
      Yes, the auto industry.

      --
      I know this because Tyler knows this.
    11. Re:fast rail in CA is a good thing... by Photar · · Score: 1

      Yeah, like extra medium too.

      --
      He who knows not and knows he knows not is a wise man. He who knows not and knows not he knows not is a fool.
    12. Re:fast rail in CA is a good thing... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Amtrak should have been cut out of the federal budget last year. It's a prime example of government mismanagement and waste, but some eager pollster managed to find a huge majority of ignorant fucks (most of whom will never get to use it) who want their Amtrak. So we'll be paying taxes to Amtrak for a long time to come.

    13. Re:fast rail in CA is a good thing... by k98sven · · Score: 1

      But, if we get something going from LA -> Sacramento, I'm hoping that it will present enough of an incentive to go to the larger Oregonian cities on the way to Seattle.

      Who wants to go to Oregon?
      and wants to go to Sacramento, anyway?

      LASF is fine with me.

    14. Re:fast rail in CA is a good thing... by Alan+Partridge · · Score: 1

      is Bumwad a real place?? :-]

      ONLY in fucking Hamerica!!

      --
      That was classic intercourse!
    15. Re:fast rail in CA is a good thing... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Amtrak to the bay area (martinez) from Chico is cheaper and faster than on greyhound. Amtrak is also MUCH more confortable. How anyone could stand being on a greyhound bus for 12 hours is beyond me. On the amtrak I can walk around, get some food or a beer, and even go use another bathroom if some idiot is sitting in the closest one to me for 3 hours straight.

    16. Re:fast rail in CA is a good thing... by Steve+G+Swine · · Score: 2

      A lot of people say that extreme apathy (XA) is too fringe and would never work in their organization, but it's really working in our shop.

      The XA planning game, where you get a bunch of blank cards and never get around to writing anything on them or talking to the customer about them, really keeps us on track or whatever.

      And I never thought I'd get used to pair apathy, but it turns out my partner and I don't really care one way or the other.

      You could look it all up on some wiki somewhere, I forget. Google it or something.

      Wait, is this not a methodology thread? Meh, no biggie...

      --
      "Consider yourself a member of a virtual corporation with Mr. Torvalds as your Chief Executive Officer." - Linux Advocac
    17. Re:fast rail in CA is a good thing... by image · · Score: 2

      > From where I am (Chico, CA), to go to Portland OR using Amtrak, it takes 14 hours and costs $100. In comparison, it takes 12 hours and costs $59 by Greyhound.

      Or you could fly from CIC to PDX for well less than $200 (actually, $164 on United right now) and get there in around four hours.

      Point being, rail is also barely price competetive with air these days. No wonder they have problems, if the bus is cheaper and faster, and flying is just a little more expensive and way faster.

    18. Re:fast rail in CA is a good thing... by nelsonal · · Score: 1

      I rode the bus twice, and I would not eat something from that toilet area if I was starving, and eating that meant the difference between life and death. You might want to put the snacks up by the driver. Also, Greyhound should change their slogan to it's not just a ride, it's an adventure.

      --
      Degaussing scares the bad magnetism out of the monitor and fills it with good karma.
    19. Re:fast rail in CA is a good thing... by Sloppy · · Score: 1
      Heh, this reminds me of the game "Mediocrity" described of Hofstadter's "Metamagical Themas."

      Three players each secretly select an integer, and then the selections are revealed. The player with the middlemost integer wins the round, and gets a point. Play continues for a pre-determined number of rounds. At the end of play, the player with the middlemost number of points, wins the game.

      In a championship, you play several games, and the player who wins the middlemost number of games, wins the championship.

      --
      As copyright owner of this comment, I authorize everyone to defeat any technological measure which limits access to it.
    20. Re:fast rail in CA is a good thing... by tenchiken · · Score: 2

      There is a difference. Compare the vast amount of space with people living on average further from major metropolitian areas with england. Quite frankly, England was crowded in the 1700's to say nothing of today. OTOH, if Colorado were to put in a fast track system, it would cost us millions of dollars, but there are only 5/10 million people in colorado. The land that we would have to cover just for this one rather small state to provide the same amount of train coverage per person would be prohibitivly expensive.

    21. Re:fast rail in CA is a good thing... by DenOfEarth · · Score: 1

      Also the possibility of connecting Seattle and Vancouver exists. Although I guess that would cause security problems.

    22. Re:fast rail in CA is a good thing... by ainsoph · · Score: 2


      And one day jet fuel will run out.

    23. Re:fast rail in CA is a good thing... by dhogaza · · Score: 2

      Oregon and Washington have concentrated on improving service between Portland and Seattle. It's double tracked the entire distance these days with one track approved for higher speeds (the faster Amtrak train does Portland to Seattle in about 3.5 hours, compared to the 4.5 hours required by the older, slower Amtrak train).

      The problem going south from Portland is that there's just a single track with sidings for much of the route, which means Amtrak trains routinely find themselves stuck behind freight trains. On-time performance on the route south of Portland is abysmal for this reason.

      We may find money and motivation to improve service from Portland to our state capital at Salem (about 45 miles south) but there's not much hope of significant improvements south to the California border any time soon. It would be extremely expensive and the potential traffic is far, far lower than that on the Portland to Seattle route (the faster trains on this route are frequently full).

    24. Re:fast rail in CA is a good thing... by goon+america · · Score: 2
      Taking the bus is NOT the same as taking the train, my friend.

      I have taken a lot of rides on each, and let me tell you, the train rides are all faded together, while bus rides I can each recall distinctly in my mind, because taking the bus is an adventure. It's a game with different rules each time you play.

      It's like being on a ship out to sea. The bus driver is in charge, can set his own rules, and everyone on the bus depends on one and other for their own survival. No matter what horrible, horrible things can and will happen on the way you're stuck until you die or reach your destination.

    25. Re:fast rail in CA is a good thing... by Xerithane · · Score: 2

      'cause Amtrak sucks. From where I am (Chico, CA), to go to Portland OR using Amtrak, it takes 14 hours and costs $100. In comparison, it takes 12 hours and costs $59 by Greyhound.

      Something even more strange is it's 12 hours from San Jose to southern Oregon (about 20 miles north of the CA/OR) border. Driving time: 7-8 hours.

      I took Amtrak once along that route, it was the stupidest experience. It's cheaper to drive, and you can save at least 4 hours.

      --
      Dacels Jewelers can't be trusted.
    26. Re:fast rail in CA is a good thing... by Xerithane · · Score: 2

      We may find money and motivation to improve service from Portland to our state capital at Salem (about 45 miles south) but there's not much hope of significant improvements south to the California border any time soon. It would be extremely expensive and the potential traffic is far, far lower than that on the Portland to Seattle route (the faster trains on this route are frequently full).

      They could resolve the Portland -> Salem problem but putting things aside from the Capital that people want to see. Who really goes from Portland to Salem for fun or anything other than a "have to"?

      The Max is now going to Vancouver, which is going to be handy. I'm really hoping that we can get a train network like Japan. You can take local trains, similar to a subway system for cheap but they are slow (Max) or a limited express for a little bit more (Like Amtrak, but cheaper ($20 from Portland to Seattle)), and a bullet train that would cost quite a bit but cruises at 180mph.

      Next up, I'm engineering some flying pigs.

      --
      Dacels Jewelers can't be trusted.
    27. Re:fast rail in CA is a good thing... by Xerithane · · Score: 2

      My guess is that the train tickets will be priced to compete with the commuter air tickets. So $100 or more (but without the wait time and full body cavity search).

      So it's going to cost more and I don't get the cavity search? Screw that, I'm sticking with American Air.

      --
      Dacels Jewelers can't be trusted.
    28. Re:fast rail in CA is a good thing... by Mr.+Spleen · · Score: 1

      Also: highlights from the 2002 North American Shrugging Championship.

      WHAT? I missed it again!? Shit. I won the Southern California regionals and I was going to compete...but if they have highlights that means it's all over. Fuck.

      Does anyone know who won?

    29. Re:fast rail in CA is a good thing... by the+Dragonweaver · · Score: 1

      Actually, I'd prefer to see a rail alternative from Sacramento to Yosemite, and from LA to same. My parents would probably go there once a month if that were available, and I'd go too while visiting.

      The statistic is that 95% of the visitors to Yosemite never get further than 15 feet from their car/tour bus/gift shops. Pathetic.

      --
      Actually I am a lab rat in an elaborate plot to take over the world.
    30. Re:fast rail in CA is a good thing... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Pathetic, but it's for the best. If all those fuckers got out of their cars and hiked then the trails would be crowded, and there'd be an even larger environmental impact than there already is.

    31. Re:fast rail in CA is a good thing... by stefanlasiewski · · Score: 2

      Who wants to go to Oregon?

      There are tens-of-millions of people who drive between California and Oregon every year. Why not ask them?

      Personally, I want the ability to go to SF to Portland in a reasonably cheap and expedient matter, without the 3 hour hassle of the airport.

      and wants to go to Sacramento, anyway?
      LASF is fine with me.


      Again, there are tens-of-millions of people who drive LA to/from Sacramento every year.

      If you're going to build the LASF line, then you're already built 80% of the LA/Sacramento line. Might as well finish the rest.

      Another major reason for LA to Sacramento: It's much cheaper to build a rail line that goes up the flat valley to Sacramento then building a line over the Bay Areas hills and through the Bay Area cities.

      --
      "Can of worms? The can is open... the worms are everywhere."
    32. Re:fast rail in CA is a good thing... by susano_otter · · Score: 2
      There are tens-of-millions of people who drive between California and Oregon every year. Why not ask them?

      I can see it now: "Excuse me, tens-of-millions of people who drive between California and Oregon every year, do you know what a joke is?"

      --

      Any sufficiently well-organized community is indistinguishable from Government.

    33. Re:fast rail in CA is a good thing... by Overd0g · · Score: 1

      No all rail sucks. It simply doesn't make economic sense. Amtrak is bankrupt, and the new trains will just achieve the same worthless results, albeit at a higher velocity.

    34. Re:fast rail in CA is a good thing... by the+Dragonweaver · · Score: 1

      Actually, you'd have to laugh, really, because that 95% is usually vastly underdressed for the conditions. Example: You know how the stereotypical Japanese tourist has a camera around their neck? It's not always true... but most of the time, you can spot them by their little thin sandals (or worse, platforms) on the rocky trails. Apparently, most of the "nature" parks in Japan are considerably more... um... "tamed" than those in the States.

      --
      Actually I am a lab rat in an elaborate plot to take over the world.
    35. Re:fast rail in CA is a good thing... by jkramar · · Score: 1

      Extreme apathy is the difference between "I don't care" and "I so don't care" or "I don't give a damn at all".

      --

      true && more || less
  19. Waste of money... by applef00 · · Score: 2, Insightful

    A monorail is a waste of money in Seattle, because everybody that is going to use mass-transit is already using mass transit. Those that *should* be using mass transit currently can't, and won't be able to with the monorail, because it won't be going far enough north or south. Mass transit is no good if I have to get in my car to get to the transit station. I should be able to walk out of my home to the platform (ala New York).

    1. Re:Waste of money... by otis+wildflower · · Score: 1

      Just make your city super-unfriendly to auto traffic (or super dense like NYC), and watch the suburban rails run!

      Between LIRR, Metro North and NJTransit, NYC's suburbs (as far north as Columbia County, about 100mi or more) are quite well served by mass transit, and people actually pay to park at the train stations!

      Still AFAICR the suburban rails are running subsidized by tolls, but what isn't in NYC? And too bad Acela between Philly and NYC is $100 round trip, that must be one helluva monthly pass, though it might almost make sense if you wanted to live in a nice loft in central philly at $8-12/ft and commute to NYC..

    2. Re:Waste of money... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Not true. I don't ride the bus because it takes twice as long as by car. I would ride the monorail because it would be twice as fast as by car. And besides, a monorail 30 feet up is cool!

    3. Re:Waste of money... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful
      everybody that is going to use mass-transit is already using mass transit
      Bullshit. Seattle Metro bus ridership is so low because the busses suck. I hate them; they're noisy and polluting and slow and get stuck in traffic like everyone else. If the Ballard/Downtown/West-Seattle monorail line is anything even remotely like the Center/Downtown shareware version, I will install it in my daily commute system in a heartbeat.
    4. Re:Waste of money... by blincoln · · Score: 2

      everybody that is going to use mass-transit is already using mass transit.

      No, they're not. There are traffic jams every time there is a game at either of the stadiums. Compare this to Vancouver, BC (where I also lived), where *masses* of people take the Skytrain to theirs, and traffic is significantly less-congested. That's going to be a huge advantage all on its own, IMO.

      Also, I personally know that as soon as I can afford to, I'm never going to ride the bus again. They're filthy, they're slow, they're scheduled too infrequently, and they're overcrowded. None of those are a problem with a well-designed monorail/elevated train system.

      The monorail is going to be the best thing to happen to Seattle transit in my lifetime. If we can manage to get a viaduct-replacing tunnel as well, this will be a really great city.

      --
      "...always new atoms but always doing the same dance, remembering what the dance was yesterday." -Richard Feynman
    5. Re:Waste of money... by Tim · · Score: 2

      "Seattle Metro bus ridership is so low because the busses suck. I hate them; they're noisy and polluting and slow and get stuck in traffic like everyone else."

      Do you even live in Seattle? Something like 70% of the buses here are electric, meaning that they're neither noisy, nor polluting. Buses regularly drive by my apartment, and I don't even know they've gone by.

      --
      Let's try not to let fact interfere with our speculation here, OK?
    6. Re:Waste of money... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Although I'm not the poster to whom you replied, I live in Seattle and yes, the buses are noisy and smelly and generally gross. I remember on the east part of Capitol Hill they use the electric wires which definitely helped add to the ghetto ugly look of the not-quite-CD area. It was kind of cool to see them at night and hear a big "zap" and flash of blue when they jumped off the wires for a split second. Now instead of the ghetto ugly wires hanging over the streets there's the smell and pollution.

      I'm more than happy that the monorail is coming and in fact, it's given me renewed interest in staying in Seattle because I could see myself getting out of my neighborhood a lot more once the monorail comes. Right now if it's outside a couple miles from my place - walking distance - I almost never bother going there because I frankly don't want to deal with figuring out the bus system, the fact that most of the buses stop service well before I do or that most of the seats are too cramped for my long legs. That means I don't go to most parties since I don't allow myself to drink and drive, and I also don't even bother visiting the u-district for a movie because I don't care to deal with parking or traffic. Even though I do enjoy an occasional street race, I'm generally a pedestrian at heart and the monorail will help me out quite a bit. I only hope that we can get extensions added soon after the initial line is done.

    7. Re:Waste of money... by Tim · · Score: 2

      "I live in Seattle and yes, the buses are noisy and smelly and generally gross. I remember on the east part of Capitol Hill they use the electric wires which definitely helped add to the ghetto ugly look of the not-quite-CD area. It was kind of cool to see them at night and hear a big "zap" and flash of blue when they jumped off the wires for a split second. Now instead of the ghetto ugly wires hanging over the streets there's the smell and pollution."

      Uh. Yeah. I know. I live in Seattle. As in, right now. Currently. And I don't know what you're talking about with the "now...instead of wires" bit...the wires are here, they still crackle blue at night, and something like 70% of the in-city buses use them. And they don't pollute, or make any more noise now than they did when they were built.

      As for the "ghetto" comments, I guess I have to ask: what is it that you want? What would make you happy? Buses have tailpipes, so they're bad, but the electric busses are bad too, because they're "ghetto." Criminy. If the teeny little bus wires offend you, I don't know what you're going to think when you find out that the monorail pylons aren't transparent....

      --
      Let's try not to let fact interfere with our speculation here, OK?
    8. Re:Waste of money... by Fnord · · Score: 2

      No the real issue with the wire busses is the fact that none of the usefull ones are wire busses. I live in the U district. I work downtown. I could take the nice quiet electric running 70 or 7, but that would take 45 minutes. The 71 72 and 73 are big smelly and gas powered. But they're express so they get me there in 15 minutes. I eat lunch with a friend in lower queen anne. All the busses that go up first are gas powered. I often go to the best buy in northgate. The 66 and 75 are gas powered. Now where are the electric busses?

    9. Re:Waste of money... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      transit station. I should be able to walk out of my home to the platform (ala New York).

      Ahem.... Chicago has had a BETTER system than Neaw-yawrk (attempt at typing that horrid new york accent) for years. I'll ride the "L" any day (including the south half of the red line!) than use that filth magnet called the new york subway.. Holy crap... do they even care? my train car shouldn't smell like piss, I shouldn't have to deal with the wad of assholes that are new-yorkers either.. ever heard of common courtesy?

    10. Re:Waste of money... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Something like 70% of the buses here are electric, meaning that they're neither noisy, nor polluting.

      Bullshit. Perhaps 70% of the buses have electric whips on them for hooking up to the very tiny stretches of power-strung streets, but they hook them up so they can shut the smoke-belching deisels off while they run through the bus tunnel, and then unhook them and turn the deisels back on on the other end. I'd guess about 2% of miles travelled are actually electric powered. Don't you ride the bus and know all that or do you just see them from the inside of your SUV and think the concept of an electric bus is pretty cool?

      Yeah, I live in Seattle. Blarg's my ISP, and the busses suck. They especially suck when you have to go downtown to transfer because there aren't any runs that do anything other than go to and from downtown to other places. The *only* thing I've ever found them useful for is getting to the airport, and that's just because the cost to ride doesn't rape you like the airporter or the cabs do. It still takes forever.

    11. Re:Waste of money... by Wyatt+Earp · · Score: 1

      The West side light rail in PDX sure made the Highway 26 free and open during the commutes...

      Actually, it didn't help one bit.

    12. Re:Waste of money... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "A monorail is a waste of money in Seattle, because everybody that is going to use mass-transit is already using mass transit."

      Wrong. I, for one, live near the proposed monorail line and don't currently use mass transit. That's because the bus takes me TWICE AS LONG to get to work as driving does. Not worth my time. When the monorail is built I will be out of my car and riding it in a flash.

    13. Re:Waste of money... by Mars+Saxman · · Score: 2

      Well, you had to have known, making a statement that broad, that somebody would chime in to prove you wrong. I don't use mass transit, because "mass transit" currently means the bus. The bus sucks. It is ALWAYS faster, cheaper, and more comfortable to drive somewhere than to take the bus there, even in heavy traffic. But I do live within walking distance of the proposed monorail, and you can bet that I will use it instead of driving. Driving in the city sucks, and trying to find somewhere to park sucks even worse; I walk, whenever I can, and would be thrilled to have a good mass transit option instead.

      The Green Line is just the beginning!

      -Mars

    14. Re:Waste of money... by Tim · · Score: 1

      "Perhaps 70% of the buses have electric whips on them for hooking up to the very tiny stretches of power-strung streets, but they hook them up so they can shut the smoke-belching deisels off while they run through the bus tunnel, and then unhook them and turn the deisels back on on the other end. I'd guess about 2% of miles travelled are actually electric powered."

      What exactly are you smoking, and can I have some?

      Yeah, bud, I do ride the bus, every damn day, and every day, it's an electric bus. Furthermore, I watch at least 4 other bus lines go down my street alone, all of which are electric. Furthermore, the major lines through downtown are all electric.

      It's pretty clear where you're getting your opinion--you've never ridden a Seattle bus outside of the bus tunnel routes. In fact, yes, when the bus tunnel is closed, the busses run diesel down 4th. The thing is, they only do that for about 4 hours a day, during the week. So I can see why you'd think that the majority of busses are gas powered when your experience with them is so limited.

      Next time you're in Downtown (other than 4th), Cap Hill, Wallingford, the U District, Ballard, First Hill or the Central District take a moment, open up your worldview and look up. See those wires? Busses run on those.

      --
      Let's try not to let fact interfere with our speculation here, OK?
    15. Re:Waste of money... by juan2074 · · Score: 1
      It is ALWAYS faster, cheaper, and more comfortable to drive somewhere than to take the bus there, even in heavy traffic.

      Making a blanket statement with the word "always"? Well, it is not always true. I used to commute by bus from the U-District and Northgate to downtown. From both neighbourhoods, I could reach my office more quickly (faster), for less cost (cheaper--since my employer paid for my monthly Metro pass), and it was more relaxing (comfortable) since I could sleep or read while the driver took the stress of driving over for me. And that was with or without heavy traffic.

      Perhaps that is true for you, but it is not true for everyone.

    16. Re:Waste of money... by Mars+Saxman · · Score: 1

      You have a point - that does look a bit silly. I suppose I should have stuck a smiley in there...

      -Mars

  20. California bond by ensignyu · · Score: 1

    It doesn't really put aside $10 billion; it just puts it on the 2004 ballot. And unfortunately, the completion date is somewhere close to 2020.

    It'll be really cool, although I'll be well out of college by the time it's ready.

  21. Around Seattle? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It is a monorail, so it just goes back and forth.

    And not to a useful place either, but Ballard?
    The old Norseman will like it I guess. Meanwhile the freeway will continue to suck till 2020. Seattle( and western washington) needs a real RTA, not a monorail to fogeytown

  22. Mono... D'oh! by The+Original+Yama · · Score: 5, Interesting

    How likely is a monorail to be profitable? Here in Sydney we've had a monorail running through the CBD for well over a decade. It's overpriced and nobody uses it but tourists. There's been talk for a long time about dismantling it, since it's not making any money.

    1. Re:Mono... D'oh! by Our+Man+In+Redmond · · Score: 5, Informative

      The current Seattle monorail system is profitable.

      Of course it costs a dollar or so and takes you a distance you can comfortably walk (basically from the Space Needle to Nordstrom's headquarters, a distance of maybe a half mile), and is a tourist attraction to boot. We locals occasionally refer to it as the "Train To Nowhere" (after a cabaret skit in which it was featured). (To be fair, they have a deal where you can park at the Seattle Center parking center and commute into downtown on the monorail, thereby avoiding downtown traffic. I'm sure it makes a fair amount of money this way.)

      Whether anyone uses it will depend on whether it ends up going where people want to go at an attractive price.

      --
      Someone you trust is one of us.
    2. Re:Mono... D'oh! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Good question. The existing one in Seattle is profitable and has been for a long long time. Of course, it's also the *only* profitable publically-owned "mass transit" system (it's less than one mile long) in the U.S. so there's no telling.

    3. Re:Mono... D'oh! by km790816 · · Score: 1

      Sydney's monorail is a bad example. It is very low capacity and it just goes in a loop. Tourists are the only ones who use it because it's a tourist system.

      For more info on the Seattle monorail project.

      http://www.elevated.org
      http://www.riseaboveita ll.org

    4. Re:Mono... D'oh! by km790816 · · Score: 1

      1) The track is almost a mile long.
      2) KPLU had a great write up about 'a day on the monorail'. A lot of commuters us it everyday.

    5. Re:Mono... D'oh! by radish · · Score: 2

      I'm sorry but those tiny little trains are soooo *cute* :) I liked it so much I went around twice.

      --

      ---- Den ene knappen er powerknapp, den andre er Bender voice knapp "Bite My Shiny Metal Ass"

    6. Re:Mono... D'oh! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Always good to have tourist attractions. Can't wait until every square inch of the U.S. is covered with expensive government funded tourist attractions. We could be the country of 6.5 million baseball stadiums, 10 million convention centers, 40 million public water slides, 50 million agricultural and technical extension services, and 60 million light rail systems! What a spectacle!

    7. Re:Mono... D'oh! by pommiekiwifruit · · Score: 2

      In that case, fly to gatwick, then bounce between the two terminals on its free monorail...

    8. Re:Mono... D'oh! by radish · · Score: 2

      Hey - I can get a _train_ to Gatwick :) The problem with it is there's nothing interesting to see.

      --

      ---- Den ene knappen er powerknapp, den andre er Bender voice knapp "Bite My Shiny Metal Ass"

    9. Re:Mono... D'oh! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Roads aren't profitable either. They are a service provided by the government.

    10. Re:Mono... D'oh! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Why should it be profitable? Roads aren't profitable. You all pay a lot MORE taxes for roads than for transit.

      Public transit is there to move people, at a reasonable cost, not be a profit centre.

  23. Old Fashion Trains by l810c · · Score: 3, Insightful
    We have a mass transit train(MARTA) that basically makes a N/S/E/W cross over Atlanta. It is basically usless for a large segment of the population. It takes me 25 minutes to get to closest station + 25 minute ride downtown. Car ride downtown is 40 minutes(As long as some dipshit has not rear ended somebody Not sure about Seattle, but here in Georgia we have old train tracks everywhere. I always thought it would make more sense to use these instead. The tracks are there, the trains would cost less. And the coverage could be almost universal.

    Never been to Seattle, but Portland uses 'Dumb Trains' with good success. Our Governor and a group of planners actually went there a couple of years ago to get some ideas.

    1. Re:Old Fashion Trains by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I flew into Atlanta recently, and rode from the Airport to Decatur. Until we got about to Five Points, I was the only white guy on the train. It wasn't frightening or threatening, just disappointing. Lots of white people still seem to think that transit is welfare on wheels rather than a cheap, safe, and effective transportation alternative. Being from a transitless region, I had high hopes for my MARTA experience. However, the Atlanteans I was visiting summed it up: "Moving Africans Rapidly Through Atlanta".

    2. Re:Old Fashion Trains by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Being from Portland I have to say our light rail isn't near what it's cracked up to be. The bus system is what keeps the mass transit wheels moving in PDX. Light rail is somewhat effective if you live near the line or a bus line which goes to a transit hub. However, the light rail is hugely subsidized (puts the busses to shame) and is really more of a political coup than a transit project. Similar to Seattle, what Portland needs is better highways with it's rapidly growing population and central focus.

    3. Re:Old Fashion Trains by stefanlasiewski · · Score: 1

      Not sure about Seattle,

      As a side note: Seattle ripped up most of the old train tracks many years ago, and it didn't have many to begin with in the downtown/residential cores.

      but here in Georgia we have old train tracks everywhere. I always thought it would make more sense to use these instead. The tracks are there, the trains would cost less./i>

      Unfortunately if they're 'old' they're probably inapproproate for light rail use (derailment city). You would have to fix them up first, and it'd probably be cheaper to rip up the old ones and install some new tracks.

      --
      "Can of worms? The can is open... the worms are everywhere."
    4. Re:Old Fashion Trains by jfortier · · Score: 2
      The using the old rail lines thing in Atlanta has actually been suggested. The Belt Line is basically a proposal to use old railways to link together urban areas that look like they'll be redeveloped into residential areas within the near future. There's also plans for bike and pedestrian paths along the light rail lines. It's still pretty far off in the future, if it even happens at all, but it looks like a cool idea that might actually work.

      http://nique.net/issues/fall2002/2002-09-27/15.htm l

  24. Ok, pardon my bitterness by schlach · · Score: 5, Interesting

    but I live in Seattle, and I voted against it.

    (a) The company is estimating $100 million per mile (light rail would be ~ $14 million / mile)

    (b) it's connecting Ballard and West Seattle (like needing a Western Passage so building one from Lake Erie to Superior, ie it goes nowhere)

    (c) the company building it is estimating that 80%
    of the ridership will be taken off of buses,rather than roads.

    (d) WA doesn't have an income tax, so the brunt of payment is falling on non-new car owning citizens (new cars aren't taxed), and disproportionately on the poor.

    (e) even if everything was perfect, it would still only connect ballard and west seattle. so what? we're gonna build a light rail system *too* in order to actually get to the frickin' airport?

    (f) Why the hell didn't they try to get federal funding? We have the dubious distinction of being the first huge construction project in history without feds backing us, and we didn't even ask for money from them. WTF? I don't think that's a record I want my city to hold...

    Hey, monorails are great, technology, ra, but we got lanley'd so bad. It passed by 800 votes. That's a slim majority for 45% of eligible voters for $2 billion in costs, without a federal dime or a state income tax.

    1. Re:Ok, pardon my bitterness by l810c · · Score: 2, Insightful
      I agree with your first 5 points completely. But..

      (f) Why the hell didn't they try to get federal funding? We have the dubious distinction of being the first huge construction project in history without feds backing us, and we didn't even ask for money from them. WTF? I don't think that's a record I want my city to hold...

      I'm glad they didn't do that, because that would mean that I(a Georgia resident) would be paying for it. I think they are setting a Nice Precedent by Not asking for funds.

      Less Federal Government.

    2. Re:Ok, pardon my bitterness by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Interesting

      (d) WA doesn't have an income tax, so the brunt of payment is falling on non-new car owning citizens (new cars aren't taxed), and disproportionately on the poor.

      Yeah, but that's a problem with your Tax system, not with how they're gonna build the monorail.

      It's going to be interesting to see how you're going to pay for those roads, since the new gas tax was denied and the car fees were reduced... it's fine to have a taxpayer revolt as long as people are realistic about what they want to pay for.

      (f) Why the hell didn't they try to get federal funding? We have the dubious distinction of being the first huge construction project in history without feds backing us, and we didn't even ask for money from them. WTF?

      The president is an oil baron. The senate and house are ruled by crooks who are trying to force another war for oil down our throat. There isn't a snowball's chance in hell that these guys will approve anything with 'rail' in the name.

      You know, if you called it an 'oil pipeline' you'd probably get 100% funding!

    3. Re:Ok, pardon my bitterness by Osty · · Score: 3, Funny

      (d) WA doesn't have an income tax, so the brunt of payment is falling on non-new car owning citizens (new cars aren't taxed), and disproportionately on the poor.

      New cars aren't taxed in Washington? GOD DAMMIT! I want my $5500 back!

    4. Re:Ok, pardon my bitterness by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I think you're wrong in your belief that you, as a Georgia resident would be paying for it.

      Considering that Georgia (amongst the '3rd world' in the US) receives more federal funding than it generates...

      Now, as a California resident, I don't mind my tax dollars going to build bombs and planes to blow up darkies & commies, but I'd rather not pay for a train.

    5. Re:Ok, pardon my bitterness by schlach · · Score: 3, Insightful

      I'm glad they didn't do that, because that would mean that I(a Georgia resident) would be paying for it. I think they are setting a Nice Precedent by Not asking for funds.

      No fair. I'm a Washington resident, and I'm paying for your construction projects.

    6. Re:Ok, pardon my bitterness by schlach · · Score: 1

      New cars aren't taxed in Washington? GOD DAMMIT! I want my $5500 back!

      Haha, it's *Washington*! I'm sure they're taxed, they're just not Monorail-taxed.

    7. Re:Ok, pardon my bitterness by stefanlasiewski · · Score: 2, Informative

      Hey, monorails are great, technology, ra, but we got lanley'd so bad. It passed by 800 votes. That's a slim majority for 45% of eligible voters

      Yeah, but this was the third time a monorail initiative was on the ballot, and it's passed all three times.

      That says something...

      --
      "Can of worms? The can is open... the worms are everywhere."
    8. Re:Ok, pardon my bitterness by chascarrillo · · Score: 1

      (b) it's connecting Ballard and West Seattle (like needing a Western Passage so building one from Lake Erie to Superior, ie it goes nowhere)

      No. It's connecting Ballard to Downtown Seattle and West Seattle to Downtown Seattle.

      Don't tell me that you're not aware of all the traffic that goes over the Ballard Bridge....

    9. Re:Ok, pardon my bitterness by stefanlasiewski · · Score: 2

      I think they are setting a Nice Precedent by Not asking for funds.

      So are you asking your State Government to not ask for Federal Highway Funds this year?

      --
      "Can of worms? The can is open... the worms are everywhere."
    10. Re:Ok, pardon my bitterness by gordon_schumway · · Score: 1
      (a) The company is estimating $100 million per mile (light rail would be ~ $14 million / mile)

      Your numbers are way off. Both monorail and light rail have initial 14 mile lines. Monorail has estimated $1.5B and light rail $2.5B, thus monorail is approximately $100M/mile and light rail $175M/mile.

      Seattle PI's Monorail vs. light rail Q&A

      --

      Ha! I kill me!

    11. Re:Ok, pardon my bitterness by BrookHarty · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I think you missed a few points. (I voted yes)

      There will be light rail, it will feed the Monorail to the north and south. (Which we need, full light rail would of been better.)

      Commute time by monorail will be 100% quicker than bus, good reason for people to change from bus and car.

      The Cost is high, but if we wait another 15 years (or is it 20 now, that light rail has been voted on) it will be 5 billion.

      Who knows on the federal funding, our state has been spending money like crazy on the stupidest things for years. We are still paying off the kingdom, and we build a new one. Check out our state budget at http://www.ofm.wa.gov/ for more info.

      BTW, main Seattle (Metro area) absentee voters tipped the vote to pass.

    12. Re:Ok, pardon my bitterness by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Interesting

      I live in Seattle and voted for it with both hands and all eleven toes.

      (a) The company is estimating $100 million per mile (light rail would be ~ $14 million / mile)

      Sound transit has ALREADY spent $2 billion, with not a foot of track to show for it. I think your numbers are slightly off anyway...the "not-quite-to-SEATC to not-quite-to-UW" light rail is gonna cost something like $6-8b for what, 20 miles? 14m*20 = a lot less than $6-8b.

      (b) it's connecting Ballard and West Seattle (like needing a Western Passage so building one from Lake Erie to Superior, ie it goes nowhere)

      Ergo, don't start building a skyscraper until the top story is finished? Don't send up an astronaut until you're ready to go to the moon? Don't invest in biomedical research until you have a surefire plan to cure cancer? You gotta start someone. And if it works out, they already have plans to expand all over the city. At this point, ANYTHING is better than nothing in Seattle. Besides, it wins on its own merits, anyway. West Seattle - Downtown - Queen Anne - Ballard takes in a lot of commuters, AND it connects all the major sporting arenas and tourist areas.

      (c) the company building it is estimating that 80%
      of the ridership will be taken off of buses,rather than roads.

      1. Buses take up road space too. 2. Car drivers come when the network effect is large enough - as the network grows, more and more ride. See (b).

      (d) WA doesn't have an income tax, so the brunt of payment is falling on non-new car owning citizens (new cars aren't taxed), and disproportionately on the poor.

      The part about it being regressive is not true at all. The tax is proportional to the car's current value, so owners of old clunkers (like me) will pay very little, while owners of 2003 10 gallons-to-the-mile armored SUVs will pay up the ass. Even better, if you don't own a car you pay nothing at all. As for "new cars aren't taxed", if you mean at the point of sale, right - it's not a sales tax. But new cars are taxed every year just like old ones.

      (e) even if everything was perfect, it would still only connect ballard and west seattle. so what? we're gonna build a light rail system *too* in order to actually get to the frickin' airport?

      Yes. It actually makes some sense. Rail in Seattles just doesn't look like it's gonna be cheap or easy. What we should have done from the start is make a rational plan like most cities (NY, Boston, DC) have: light/commuter rail outside the city connecting to mass transit inside the city. Make Downtown/SoDo the hub, with light rail going south and the monorail spiderwebbing around the city. Doesn't that make more sense than spending $2b just for a rail tunnel under the ship canal?

      Besides, at this rate, I think I think global warming will make Seattle a tropical paradise before a mile of light rail actually gets built.

      (f) Why the hell didn't they try to get federal funding? We have the dubious distinction of being the first huge construction project in history without feds backing us, and we didn't even ask for money from them. WTF? I don't think that's a record I want my city to hold...

      Eh, fsck Bush. But if we want something DONE, we need to do it ourselves. So be it. Better to do it than to whine about it. As for light rail, understand I'm a big proponent of it too, but over the last two years it's been eviscerated almost to the point of uselessness - with no construction in sight.

    13. Re:Ok, pardon my bitterness by l810c · · Score: 3, Interesting
      Considering that Georgia (amongst the '3rd world' in the US) receives more federal funding than it generates...

      You've been watching too many Dukes of Hazard reruns. The statistics I dug up show we Gawjuns generate more than we take.

      Gross Product
      Federal Funds

      Couldn't find Fed taxes paid as that would have been a better comparison, but clearly we are not livin off the rest of the country.

    14. Re:Ok, pardon my bitterness by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Actually, slighlty wrong. Sound transit was suppoed to cost 1.3B and do 21 miles. it is now going to cost 2.5 B with only 11 miles. It is almost certain that LTR will end up at the 3B + mark for 10 miles and no parking. monorail was well thought and its' cost are fairly fixed. monorail is suppose to cost 1.4 B with possible up to 1.7B.

    15. Re:Ok, pardon my bitterness by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      WOULD HAVE BEEN!

    16. Re:Ok, pardon my bitterness by Osty · · Score: 1

      It's going to be interesting to see how you're going to pay for those roads, since the new gas tax was denied and the car fees were reduced... it's fine to have a taxpayer revolt as long as people are realistic about what they want to pay for.

      That referrendum failed because it was a bad referrendum (for my vote, I never could get an official number on the tax amount, nor could I find a length limit on the tax -- since it was designed for a specific set of imporvements, it should exist for a specific amount of time). If the lawmakers would go back to the drawing board and come up with a realistic plan, I'm sure they'd have no trouble getting it passed. You've got to wonder about a referrendum that failed in a state full of hippies, liberals, and feminazis. Even they apparently had issues with it.


    17. Re:Ok, pardon my bitterness by schlach · · Score: 2

      Commute time by monorail will be 100% quicker than bus, good reason for people to change from bus and car.

      I doubt it will be 100% quicker.

      And are you quite sure people will not be taking a bus to get to the monorail station? The time comparisons I've seen do favor monorail, but they seem to start the race at the point someone steps on the bus or monorail, without worrying about how long it took to get there.

      The Cost is high, but if we wait another 15 years (or is it 20 now, that light rail has been voted on) it will be 5 billion.

      That's not a reason. If we wait forever, the cost will be 0.

    18. Re:Ok, pardon my bitterness by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Ok, first, I live in the puget sound, Tacoma. I know the traffic and I know the problems yadda yadda. I'm just here for a counter arguement to some of these points.

      (a) 100 million / mile. Not that bad. Gives us MORE reason to want to pay our state for doing things. Tribnet

      (b)Hmmm whats all this stuff in between... You make it sound like they're too close together for a link to matter. Ooo Pictures

      (c)Now I cant even BELIEVE you're using this as an arguement. 80% of the ridership comes from busses. EVEN if that happens thats a decrease in the overall usage of busses which means they can support more routes and take busses off the roads which is just one more thing out of your way and not causing traffic. Not only that but the 20% that dont come from busses get off the roads, and the 80% that do, get where they need to go. :)

      (d) Check (a)

      (e) Check (b)

      AND sorry but a combination of systems is more often then not more effective. A monorail connecting all those areas doesnt sound cost effective. A light rail system connecting all those areas, doesnt *appear* to be a big enough impact on actual traffic. [In my opinion anyway]

      (f) This, I dont know. Its the one thing on your list that doesnt make as much sense to me. Finally, I'd like to say if Seattle tries nothing, it therefore, ends up doing nothing. Would you rather make an attempt to alleviate traffic problems, or have too many people sit around whining, who dont want to pay taxes [refer to (a)] ??? I preferably would like to be able to get places without bumper to bumper traffic nearly everyday.

      Modders, forgive my attitude. The Puget sound traffic can do that to us. We just want our problems fixed... thats all.

    19. Re:Ok, pardon my bitterness by Loligo · · Score: 2, Insightful

      >Commute time by monorail will be 100% quicker than bus

      Wow, so a 30 minute commute will now take 0 minutes? That's AMAZING!

      Just think, if they make the monorail go faster, I can be at work before I leave the house!

      -l

    20. Re:Ok, pardon my bitterness by Woodrose · · Score: 0

      You should move to Melbourne, here in Horse Trailer. We're totally networked by train, tram and bus networks (one ticket for all) and they carry more passengers per day than the road system. The beer's better too, and you can get totally tanked and still get home without driving. Hah! So there.

      St.Kilda Road is great.

      22% of all statistics are made up on the spot

      --

      Thou hast damnable iteration, and art indeed able to corrupt a saint - Henry IV, Act I scene II

    21. Re:Ok, pardon my bitterness by Daniel+Dvorkin · · Score: 2

      Gross product vs. federal funds is a meaningless comparison. The poster wasn't arguing that GA (or any other state) receives more federal funding than the total amount of money the state generates; he's arguing, correctly, that it gets more from the federal government than it puts in. Every federal dollar spent in any state comes from tax revenues, and it turns out that Georgians aren't paying their share of those taxes.

      Ironically, this is true of many Republican states in the South and West (including Colorado, where I live) which like to brag about their individualism and committment to small government -- and not true of the Democratic states in the Northeast and upper Midwest.

      --
      The correlation between ignorance of statistics and using "correlation is not causation" as an argument is close to 1.
    22. Re:Ok, pardon my bitterness by BitGeek · · Score: 2


      The reason you should be bitter is its MORE TAXES.

      The state of washington collects enough in taxes to build both light rail and the monorail, in their full configurations, WITHOUT raising taxes.

      But to the state, the roads aren't an imporant part of government (when in truth they are one of the few) and so they'd rather spend %80 of their budget on Health insurance for non-workers and education.

      Screw that-- the only legitimate use for state money is stuff that benefits EVERYONE, and the roads will grow the economy quite a lot. Spend it on the roads FIRST. Then spend it on education (but raise tuitions, damnit. World class college should not be virtually free.) And then if you have money left over spend it on extra health care.

      The frigging state ran huge surpluses in the 90s, and what did they do with that money? SPENT IT ALL. Now that the economy is soft, they want to raise taxes.

      Notice, they weren't refunding our taxes when they had the surpluses.

      This is unacceptable fiscal irresponsibility.

      Locke has to go, and so does virtually everyone in state government.

      Lets get Tim Eyman in the governorship so we can start voting on EVERYTHING.

      --
      Yeah, and you guys panned the ipod too: http://apple.slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=01/10/23/ 1816257
    23. Re:Ok, pardon my bitterness by thefoobar · · Score: 1

      Correction - light rail is a joke. It would not be $14 million per mile. I live in Seattle as well, and, as I'm sure you know, we haven't laid an inch of the new Sound Transit and we're already over budget by two billion - yes, that's with a "b".

      And you're completely right. All the monorail will be is a transfer platform for current bus riders. It doesn't take any drivers off of the freeway. And, we're required to be on the freeway, because the Metro (bus) system sucks. I used to be a bus rider, but at my new job there isn't a bus stop except for 1/2 a mile away. Also, I would have to take one system (Community Transit) to downtown Seattle, would have three minutes to transfer to Metro (the stop is 3 blocks away), and if I miss my bus, I do not have an alternative for 1.5 hours.

      So, however you look at it, WA transit is crap. We got screwed.

      --
      ------------------ D. A. Davenport: http://www.firebin.net
    24. Re:Ok, pardon my bitterness by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      We faced a similar situation here in Vancouver. Do we build another Skytrain line (or two, or three), or pump more money into roads and buses?

      I favour Skytrain. Why? It's elevated, and so it's removed from traffic snarls. Buses and most light rail share the road. 30 minutes downtown during rushhour, rather than well over an hour in a car. It's electric, it's scalable.

      Sure, that money could be spent on buses. However, critics who enjoy repeated this line forget that when buses are pulled off of routes replaced with the Skytrain line, they can be deployed elsewhere.

      We're finally beginning to see critical mass of rapid transit, commuter rail, rapid bus, passenger ferries, and community shuttles. It's now possible to get from a 'burb on one side of Vancouver to one on the other, and back again, in a reasonable time.

      Future lines include downtown to the airport and Richmond. Sure, take a bus. When you're stuck on one of the three bridges or tunnels into Richmond, I'll be flying by at 70Km/h(~40 MPH)on Skytrain.

      Go elevated rapid transit, or stay home.

    25. Re:Ok, pardon my bitterness by schlach · · Score: 1

      The reason you should be bitter is its MORE TAXES.

      "Taxes" do not bother me, per se. What bothers me is how those taxes are collected. Sales taxes, like flat taxes, fall disproportionately on the poor. I have never seen a higher concentration of BMWs anywhere in America than the Seattle area (actually, it gets higher the closer you get to Redmond ;) There's plenty of people with enough money to spring for roads, or education, or any of the other worthy government projects, but we're ignoring that money in favor of a 9% sales tax, and huge vehicle taxes.

      The frigging state ran huge surpluses in the 90s, and what did they do with that money? SPENT IT ALL. Now that the economy is soft, they want to raise taxes.

      I dunno, I only got here in time for the bomb =)

      Lets get Tim Eyman in the governorship so we can start voting on EVERYTHING.

      Ok, so i haven't been here that long, but long enough to figure out this guy's a crackpot. FYI: Tim Eyman is some perennial anti-tax crusader that frequently gets anti-tax referendums on ballots, and often they get passed. Then an alliance of legislators and the courts get together to figure out how to invalidate it (like, in the space marked "Do not write here", he wrote, "OK").

      It's not hard to pitch anti-tax referendums to people, but I'm not convinced that less taxes will make paying for the programs we want any easier. Rather, I think it will just make it more likely that education, health and human services and other populist programs get scrapped for new road construction.

    26. Re:Ok, pardon my bitterness by ScuzzMonkey · · Score: 2

      Yeah, but it also says something that the margins have gotten lower every time... the more people learned about the details, the less they liked it.

      I'm pretty well convinced that most people who voted for it didn't really have a good idea of what they were actually getting in the deal and what it was going to cost them to get it. Cool? Yeah, it's cool. Cost effective? Not so much.

      --
      No relation to Happy Monkey
    27. Re:Ok, pardon my bitterness by Pig+Hogger · · Score: 2
      Screw that-- the only legitimate use for state money is stuff that benefits EVERYONE, and the roads will grow the economy quite a lot. Spend it on the roads FIRST. Then spend it on education (but raise tuitions, damnit. World class college should not be virtually free.) And then if you have money left over spend it on extra health care.
      A true stupid moronic bigoted yankee post, if I ever saw one!!!

      Roads do not benefit everyone; they only benefit motorists (that is, those who own cars). Public transit, on the other hand, benefit everyone, especially motorists, either if they leave their car and take transit, or simply by REMOVING CARS FROM THE STREET by providing an alternative.

    28. Re:Ok, pardon my bitterness by bucephalis · · Score: 1

      "Haha, it's *Washington*! I'm sure they're taxed, they're just not Monorail-taxed."

      Exactly correct. The monorail proposal exempted new(ly purchased) cars on the theory that they were already paying enough in the state excise/sales taxes. What's amazing is that they actually felt it was POSSIBLE to pay enough!...

    29. Re:Ok, pardon my bitterness by RandomCoil · · Score: 2
      The part about it being regressive is not true at all. The tax is proportional to the car's current value, so owners of old clunkers (like me) will pay very little, while owners of 2003 10 gallons-to-the-mile armored SUVs will pay up the ass.

      The tax may not be regressive, but it certainly doesn't make sense. Mass transit of any sort should be paid for by those who are most likely to create the congestion/pollution in the first place. It does not make sense for the office worker who lives downtown, walks to work, but owns a new $40k car to pay more than the worker commuting from the god-knows-where in his/her 15-20 year old proto-SUV. A gas tax would have encouraged carpooling, use of mass transit, and the purchase of more efficient vehicles.

      Instead, we have people holding on to their old clunkers because they don't want the extra car payment per year and nothing has been done to increase the long-term cost differential between a 30-50mpg hybrid car costing $20k and 10-20 mpg mini-SUV costing the same. Truly brilliant planning.

    30. Re:Ok, pardon my bitterness by bucephalis · · Score: 1

      "so they'd rather spend %80 of their budget on Health insurance for non-workers and education."

      Libertarian streak and all, I feel obligated to point out that, according to the state constitution, WA is specifically REQUIRED to do the education thing, AND the state supreme court has ruled on this also.

    31. Re:Ok, pardon my bitterness by BrookHarty · · Score: 2

      Wow, so a 30 minute commute will now take 0 minutes? That's AMAZING!

      Actually the time was was every 7 minutes the Monorail would run.

      BTW, if you have 30 minute commute time in Seattle, you must only be driving 1 block.

    32. Re:Ok, pardon my bitterness by sulli · · Score: 1
      Why the hell didn't they try to get federal funding?

      Federal funding is a deal with the devil. "Buy American" requirements often raise the cost of the project more than the amount you get from the Feds.

      --

      sulli
      RTFJ.
    33. Re:Ok, pardon my bitterness by joggle · · Score: 1

      Are you sure about Colorado? I know its rather close there. It looks like New Jersey looses the most money to the fed whereas the plain states (Kansas, Nebraska, etc.) get the most. I think this is mostly due to agriculture subsidies.

    34. Re:Ok, pardon my bitterness by l810c · · Score: 2
      As I said in my post, Fed taxes paid would have been a better comparison. Surely, however, there is some correlation between GP and Taxes paid. Where are you getting your stats? Have a link?

      The original poster called Georgia a '3rd World' state. Georgia is ~13th in population and GP and 14th in Fed Funding. Looks like the Top 3rd to me.

    35. Re:Ok, pardon my bitterness by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I live in Vancouver too, and I love the Skytrain. I work downtown, and I my house is close to a station.. Sometimes I have to drive to work, and it takes an extra 20 minutes to get there, including the time it takes to find parking, as well as the added expense. I do hope they keep on expanding it. Either onto the Airport or Coquitlam.. wouldn't it be awesome if it went all the way to the border? it could happen.

    36. Re:Ok, pardon my bitterness by sql*kitten · · Score: 2

      Roads do not benefit everyone; they only benefit motorists (that is, those who own cars). Public transit, on the other hand, benefit everyone, especially motorists, either if they leave their car and take transit, or simply by REMOVING CARS FROM THE STREET by providing an alternative.

      Let me ask you a question: do you shop? Do you buy, say, groceries? At all? And how do you suppose they got to the store? On a tram?

      You are wholly reliant on the roads and you don't even know it.

    37. Re:Ok, pardon my bitterness by Pig+Hogger · · Score: 2
      Let me ask you a question: do you shop? Do you buy, say, groceries? At all? And how do you suppose they got to the store? On a tram?
      That's the store's problem, not mine.

      Right by the end of the street where I live is a public market, on each side of which are two (2) railroad yards (one for two of the 4 or 5 that come here) precisely for reefers to carry food into the market. And what do you know, when I walk to/from work along one of the tracks, half the time I meet the little train that brings cars to the market and the flour mill and whatnot other industries.

      Needless to say, last time I got into a car was, oh, roughly two months ago.

    38. Re:Ok, pardon my bitterness by brokenbeaker · · Score: 1

      "The Cost is high, but if we wait another 15 years (or is it 20 now, that light rail has been voted on) it will be 5 billion."

      'That's not a reason. If we wait forever, the cost will be 0.'

      This is not a valid argument. If a public transport system is not invested in, there will be huge costs in traffic jams, public health etc. Dollars are not the only way to measure cost.

    39. Re:Ok, pardon my bitterness by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I live on Alki, and normally it would take 25-30 minutes to get to downtown via bus. To take the monorail, you'd have to take the bus to West Seattle Junction, which would take 25 minutes, then wait up to 5-7 minutes, then it would take who knows, 15 minutes more to get to downtown on the monorail (considering the stops and the distance and relatively slow speed of the monorail). So if we race and I take the bus and you take the monorail, I'll beat you by 15 minutes and I'll spend half as much on fares!

      Meanwhile I wake up to reality and realize I work in Bellevue/Redmond and can't get there via monorail!

    40. Re:Ok, pardon my bitterness by BitGeek · · Score: 2



      Ok, you havent' been here long enoguh to know that %50 of the state tax money goes into healthcare for people who could probably afford it anyway.

      You think cause some people are rich they owe you something? Fuck that. They don't own you squat, even if they do drive a BMW.

      Eyman is a crackpot, you say, yet his proposals are getting passed.

      The state government has ALL THE MONEY IT NEEDS To do everyting in R51 but it went to us for more taxes anyway. Why is that?

      Too many people like you who want to soak the rich and so they won't pay attention to the fact that the government is wasting money like crazy on crackpot stupid programs.

      Oh, and you raise the taxes too much and your taxbase will leave.

      We already are one of the highest taxed states in the nation.

      And a nice thing about sales tax- it doesn't disproportionatly punish the poor, they buy LESS,jesus. Sales taxes are ones you can avoid by altering your lifestyle.

      Income taxes don't care if your sister needs $100,000 to save the farm-- they take your money anyway and your sister looses the farm, and some welfare queen gets antoher case of dom perinion.

      --
      Yeah, and you guys panned the ipod too: http://apple.slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=01/10/23/ 1816257
    41. Re:Ok, pardon my bitterness by BitGeek · · Score: 2


      Uh, but I suspect the constitution does not say it has to be %50 of the budget!

      We have some platinum coated universities here-- they don't need taxpayer money.

      --
      Yeah, and you guys panned the ipod too: http://apple.slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=01/10/23/ 1816257
    42. Re:Ok, pardon my bitterness by schlach · · Score: 2

      Ok, in general I didn't really find your comment stimulating enough to respond to, but I will respond to your "give the rich man a break" sentiment.

      Oh, and you raise the taxes too much and your taxbase will leave.

      We already are one of the highest taxed states in the nation.


      Now that's interesting, if not contradictory. If we're the second "highest-taxed" (there's about a billion ambiguities in that statement) state in the land, and the taxbase is still here, it seems to me they're not going to leave, unless it's to go to the #1 highest-taxed state. We could make the tax code much more intelligent, so that we're not so "highly taxed", but people pay an amount proportionate to their income instead of their purchases and vehicles, and that should make everyone happy. High-tax whiners won't have to complain about how high-taxed we are, and the poor won't have to see a higher percentage of their income gobbled up in sales and vehicle taxes than they would with an income tax.

      Unless you don't really think we're so highly taxed now...

      You think cause some people are rich they owe you something? Fuck that. They don't own you squat, even if they do drive a BMW.

      Too many people like you who want to soak the rich and so they won't pay attention to the fact that the government is wasting money like crazy on crackpot stupid programs.


      I don't like to ignore government inefficiency. I also don't consider homeless shelters "crackpot stupid" programs. And I don't consider it "soaking" the rich. I consider it shouldering one's responsibility to society. A lot of rich people think they got there without anyone's help, and they get upset when someone suggests they share some of their good fortune with others. I think that's bunk. It hurts to think of a 37-39% chunk coming out of your paycheck, err, excuse me, annual report, but I bet few rich people really pay the amount of the bracket they're in, anyway.

      When I make it to the top, I hope I'm a bit more magnimonious with my money than those I see around me. May my words come back to condemn me should a flat-taxer I come to be.

    43. Re:Ok, pardon my bitterness by BitGeek · · Score: 2


      In other words, you're proud of your ignorance of economics because your an environmentalist.

      Well, poser environmentalist-- real environmentalists pay attention to science, and one of the most important sciences to environmentalism is economics.

      Anyway, not only do you ignore basic economics, you say that your positions are totally based on what YOU want, not whats best for society-- which ok, and in fact supports my point.

      Lets get rid of this taxation that only funds what the politically connected narrow mind idiots want and let everyone fund the things they want directly. That way everyone can get what tehy need and not be wasting their money on stuff that nobody wants (but was useful for getting someone elected at some point.)

      --
      Yeah, and you guys panned the ipod too: http://apple.slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=01/10/23/ 1816257
    44. Re:Ok, pardon my bitterness by BitGeek · · Score: 2


      Sorry, but your whole position is based on ignorance.

      First off, the average person in washington pays over %50 of their salary in taxes-- not because they are "Rich" but because the tax burden is pretty high.

      You hadn't figured out that your total tax burden is more than just what you pay in your BASE income taxes, did you?

      Furthermore, you talk about "paying your fair share" but on just the federal taxes the highest rate is 4 times the lowest rate.

      IF people were paying their fair share, they'd all pay the same PERCENTAGE of their income to taxes-- and thus the richer you are, the more you'd pay.

      This isn't really fair either, actually, because EVERYONE gets the same benefit from the government and has the same cost to the government.

      Truely fair would be for everyone to pay the same DOLLAR AMOUNT in taxes to the government.

      But you'd never stand for that, screaming about how "unfair" it is based on bullshit assumptions (like the rich get more from government-- often made, never backed up. Fucking idiot statement, that.)

      But no, you want ot tax a higher percentage from the more wealthy-- which is pure bigotry.

      You might as well be advocating that gay people and black people pay more taxes than straight or white people-- cause its just as bigoted an idea.

      And Magnanimousness has nothing to do with it-- those taxes don't HELP ANYONE. They hurt people-- so when you want to tax people to help the poor- you're actually CREATING POVERTY.

      Course to realize that you'd have to understand some economics, and your party will be sure to keep your head full of ignorant contradictions.

      But that also means you'll always be poor. To become wealthy you have to reconcile those contradictions and learn how wealth is created- when you do that, you'll realize that the liberal agenda is to create a massive poor underclass to keep them in power, and in effect go the direction of the soviet union where the political elites are wealthily and everyone else is poor. (Which is why they hate the rich-- those who are capable are threatening to those who want unearned wealth based on political status rather than ability.)

      --
      Yeah, and you guys panned the ipod too: http://apple.slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=01/10/23/ 1816257
    45. Re:Ok, pardon my bitterness by schlach · · Score: 2


      IF people were paying their fair share, they'd all pay the same PERCENTAGE of their income to taxes-- and thus the richer you are, the more you'd pay.

      This isn't really fair either, actually, because EVERYONE gets the same benefit from the government and has the same cost to the government.

      Truely fair would be for everyone to pay the same DOLLAR AMOUNT in taxes to the government.

      But you'd never stand for that, screaming about how "unfair" it is based on bullshit assumptions (like the rich get more from government-- often made, never backed up. Fucking idiot statement, that.)

      But no, you want to tax a higher percentage from the more wealthy-- which is pure bigotry.

      You might as well be advocating that gay people and black people pay more taxes than straight or white people-- cause its just as bigoted an idea.


      EOD

    46. Re:Ok, pardon my bitterness by BitGeek · · Score: 2


      In other words, you have no argument to make.

      I don't mind that people are liberals-- everyone can get mislead when they are told lies.

      I do mind that liberals will never construct a logical argument in defense of their positions.

      Maybe this is because if they did, they'd see how wrong they are.

      By the way, if you want to refute something, at least link to topics that are relevant, Ken Lay's bio is a refutation of how government services are distributed?

      This is what passes for thinking for you?

      --
      Yeah, and you guys panned the ipod too: http://apple.slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=01/10/23/ 1816257
    47. Re:Ok, pardon my bitterness by Pig+Hogger · · Score: 2
      Look at the asshole who thinks that the economy is everything.

      It ain't, buddy. There are many more things in life besides economics.

      And I'm glad not to know too much about economics, because those who do are total assholes.

    48. Re:Ok, pardon my bitterness by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I don't mind that people are liberals-- everyone can get mislead when they are told lies.

      I do mind that liberals will never construct a logical argument in defense of their positions.

      Maybe this is because if they did, they'd see how wrong they are.


      Rush Limbaugh is a big fat idiot.

  25. Sound Transit and the Monorail by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful
    The Seattle Monorail has been a long, long politically charged struggle. I've voted for it three times so far. One of the early problems that the Monorail faced was a tremendous amount of opposition from the people with big money that wanted to build an enourmously expensive and unworkable rail system here in Seattle. The "Sound Transit" (they renamed themselves because people came to hate them as "Regional Transit Authority") people were apparently receiving big lobby money from rail industry groups that wanted a fat contract, and they didn't seem to really care what would or wouldn't work for Seattle. It was too obvious even to the corrupt, however, that the rail system absolutely couldn't be done for any reasonable amount of money, and it's been in a perpetual state of falling over dead and being resurrected for the past 8 years or so.

    The Monorail, which from the very start was a viable and practical proposal to help deal with Seattle's critical-mass transportation problem, has been largely ignored by politicians for reasons unknown. The Monorail focus has been on solving transportation problems, and thus far seems to have been devoid of any lobbying or tampering by outfits that just want a contract. Every initiative, every election, was a result of a grassroots effort to make it happen. That it has made it as far as it has is a testament to the regular people that have labored so hard on it.

    It ain't over yet though. You can bet that the rail forces will be back to create pain for the Monorail wherever they can. Stay tuned for the Sound Transit versus the Monorail shenanigans in Seattle over the next few years.

    1. Re:Sound Transit and the Monorail by tres · · Score: 1


      The monorail does nothing to aleve congestion problems. What minute proportion of the population will be served by a project that only serves to break the back of more viable, better long-term solutions?

      You've simply squandered more money, made the goals of mass transit more diffuse, and have left just as many cars on the road.

      Thanks

      --
      Notes From Under *nix: blas.phemo.us
    2. Re:Sound Transit and the Monorail by jbrians · · Score: 1

      Er, and this new non-evil-corprate-backed monorail solves who's problems? The traffic problems in King county are mainly across the lake both ways. Nobody commutes from Ballard to West Seattle.

      --
      "Faith strikes me as intellectual laziness." -Robert A. Heinlen
    3. Re:Sound Transit and the Monorail by funkapus · · Score: 4, Insightful

      The monorail does nothing to aleve congestion problems.

      There may well still be plenty of people stuck in traffic. The advantage of this system is that city dwellers will have a completely congestion-free channel that runs north-south through the city. Neither buses nor light rail will provide that.

      Sure there will still be congestion. I'll look down on it with pity as I go sailing by overhead during a Sonics game.

      On a different note, I don't know that there is a solution that will reduce congestion. Buses and light rail won't get people out of cars necessarily either, and they have the added disadvantage of being at grade and thus contributing to MORE congestion. The only thing you can do to clear up the roads is to build wider roads, and that just reduces it for a while, until we fill up the new capacity. Eventually you've paved over everything, and then where do you go?

      Look at NYC. Plenty of congestion. Nobody cares, because anybody with half a brain is riding the subway.

      What minute proportion of the population will be served by a project that only serves to break the back of more viable, better long-term solutions?

      First, it's not a minute proportion. The initial monorail line is where it is because the City of Seattle considers that the most congested corridor in town.

      Second, I'd love to hear those more viable, better long-term solutions. I haven't seen any to date. More buses? They'll be stuck in traffic, same as they are now. Light rail? How are we going to run it through downtown?

      Now if you're talking about solar-powered personal teleporters, I'm all for it.

    4. Re:Sound Transit and the Monorail by tres · · Score: 1
      Monorail serves the interests of a very small part of Seattle, I mean your statement
      Sure there will still be congestion. I'll look down on it with pity as I go sailing by overhead during a Sonics game.
      really says it all. You are more concerned with funding something that will benefit the exclusive few who live in the two areas serviced rather than a project conceived for the benefit of all. I mean really, you're building this on the backs of all the people over in the Rainier valley (all the people who will be buying the second-hand cars that go to pay for this), the very people who won't be getting anything out of this deal. And it sounds like you have no problem with it.

      It may be the most congested corridor in town, but the distance is small enough that even a leisurely bus ride doesn't take that long.

      You want a more viable long-term solution? Light rail. You want to know how to run it through down town? Run light rail right underneath the Alaska Way Viaduct. The inevitable reconstruction of the viaduct can work double-duty, getting light-rail right to the heart of downtown with a minimum of impact.

      --
      Notes From Under *nix: blas.phemo.us
    5. Re:Sound Transit and the Monorail by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It ought to be a "long, hard political struggle" if you're trying to shove a huge revenue drain down the taxpayer's throats. The people who went to the trouble of voting against this measure are the ones who are going to have to pay for this stinker anyway. The people who work for what they have and don't want someone else to take it away from them don't shed any tears for left wing hacks like yourself.

    6. Re:Sound Transit and the Monorail by ameoba · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Sound transit has at least accomplished something tangible, like providing a _workable_ system for those wanting to get to Seattle from up here in Snohomish county. Before ST, if you wanted to get to downtown Seattle from Everett, you were looking at a bus-ride of some 3-hr (to travel a distace of about 45 miles) and 3-4 transfers (with the exception of the 2-3 runs per day, each way, of the CT commuter busses). ST's express busses make the trip in an hour.

      Decent mass-transit is an idea that's come too late. I know, up here in Snohomish county, other than during rush-hour, it's EMBARRASING to ride the bus anywhere; the only people riding it are kids w/o cars, the poor, the crippled and insane. Building the monorail out to Ballard would have been a good idea FOURTY YEARS AGO, but today? Why don't we extend the tracks on the roller-coaster at the center out to Bellevue, too?

      Seattle's gone far too long without decent transit; everywhere BUT the city core has shitty connectivity. The monorail (or the other light-rail line) are little more than gold-plated band-aids to cover up the big, gaping wound that is the transit system around. For the three billion dollars that a monorail is going to cover, we could service a lot more people in a lot better ways.

      Transit inside of the city limits is already good enought, what really needs to be done is get decent connectivity from the outlying areas TO the city. (no, park-and-rides don't count; they're a joke & nobody trusts their cars there). Imagine what could be done if that $3B was given to outlying transit agencies to expand their services and actually _promote_ transit ridership to the suburbanites (the people who can choose NOT to take the bus, not those who have no other choices)...

      --
      my sig's at the bottom of the page.
    7. Re:Sound Transit and the Monorail by coyotenose · · Score: 1

      At a cost of 1.7 billion dollars and with an estimated daily ridership of 22,000, the monorail will cost about $77,000 per rider. More of course if the rider estimate is low. The population of
      two Seattle districts, Ballard and West Seattle will actually be able to use it for commuting. All other Seattle residents will be left out. Also, note that most of the estimated ridership already uses mass transit, i.e. the Metro Bus system.

      This is a city where public libraries will close
      for at least two weeks next year to save money.
      I, for one, would pay the 1.4% ANNUAL excise tax
      on my car to keep libraries open. But to pay the same for a transit system I can't use because of
      where I live seems foolish. I guess the only way to avoid it is to leave. Some choice eh?

    8. Re:Sound Transit and the Monorail by scotch · · Score: 2

      Of course not - people commute from west seattle to downtown, and from Ballard to downtown. Don't be disingenuous. The proposed first leg is just that - the first of many. You have to start somewhere. Starting with a congested corridor that doesn't involve working out how to put a monorail on floating bridges makes a lot of sense to me.

      --
      XML causes global warming.
    9. Re:Sound Transit and the Monorail by bscottid · · Score: 1

      Your numbers are way off. According to the plan, the Seattle monorail will carry 72,000 people per day. That works out to 21,100,000 people per year. If you carry that ridership out over 30 years, you end up with $2.69 per rider.

    10. Re:Sound Transit and the Monorail by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      so what we can encourage more sprawl? no thanks.

    11. Re:Sound Transit and the Monorail by Pig+Hogger · · Score: 2
      The Seattle Monorail has been a long, long politically charged struggle. I've voted for it three times so far. One of the early problems that the Monorail faced was a tremendous amount of opposition from the people with big money that wanted to build an enourmously expensive and unworkable rail system here in Seattle. The "Sound Transit" (they renamed themselves because people came to hate them as "Regional Transit Authority") people were apparently receiving big lobby money from rail industry groups that wanted a fat contract, and they didn't seem to really care what would or wouldn't work for Seattle. It was too obvious even to the corrupt, however, that the rail system absolutely couldn't be done for any reasonable amount of money, and it's been in a perpetual state of falling over dead and being resurrected for the past 8 years or so.
      This is bullshit. The very concept of the monorail is bullshit by itself. The sheer size and bulkyness of switches means that they are vastly more costlier than equivalent birail switches. Therefore, the given network will necessarly have FEWER switches and will be far less flexible; so when one train will be disabled, the whole system will grind down to a halt, instead of peacefully running around it.

      Besides, birail vehicles and tracks are already built in standard types in large quantities, so this is a big factor to keep costs down in comparison to the huge custom-made job that stupid monorail will prove to be. And at $1.2 billion for a 14 mile line, that's $86 million a mile. Compare this to $14 million a mile for a light rail system!!!

      I'm afraid that the taxpayers just got goatsee.cxed!!!

    12. Re:Sound Transit and the Monorail by funkapus · · Score: 2

      Well, let's be clear about a few things. First, "the two areas serviced" are West Seattle, SoDo, the stadiums, Pioneer Square, downtown, Belltown, Seattle Center, Queen Anne, and Ballard. It's not like there's going to be one stop in West Seattle and one stop in Ballard, which is what monorail opponents continualy imply. It would not be possible to hit a bigger chunk of the Seattle population with a single line. Furthermore, if the ETC had proposed an entire citywide system right off the bat, the same people who are currently complaining about coverage would be complaining about the expense and asking why we weren't building a proof-of-concept line first.

      Second, this is, as has been stated, only the first of a series of monorail lines. Assuming all goes well, the voters will get the chance to approve a Capitol Hill line, a Ballard-to-U-District line, and others.

      Third, light rail is already set to run through the Rainier Valley. Rainier Valley will be served, just not by monorail. The monorail is legally not allowed to compete with Sound Transit in that manner.

      Fourth, people buying second-hand cars, whether they live in Rainier Valley or wherever, won't be paying all that much, since it's a 1.4% tax based on value. The bulk of revenue will come from new expensive cars that were bought the previous year.

      Fifth, taking the bus from West Seattle or Ballard to downtown takes on the order of 40 minutes. To ride the full length from West Seattle to Ballard would take about an hour and ten minutes. This is assuming that there's no Mariners traffic, in which case the time is more like two hours.

      Sixth, using light rail instead of monorail over the same route would solve nothing. It would make congestion worse if built at grade, cost more to build, be substantially louder during operation, and have a much more significant impact on the businesses it passed during construction. Sure, you could put it in a tunnel. Tunnels are about the most expensive public-works project money can buy. I'm sure we'd pay something like four or five times what we're going to pay for monorail if we did it that way, with no value added. Plus it would be much less accessible to downtown, given that it would have to follow the viaduct and would just run along the western edge of the city. Once completed, it'd be substantially more difficult to link to other lines in the city.

    13. Re:Sound Transit and the Monorail by tres · · Score: 1

      First, you still haven't shown that the monorail doesn't service anything more than the two areas as stated before.

      Second this is hoped to be the first in a series of monorail lines. There's no guarantee that all the money spent will be worth anything more than the 1/4 mile of monorail already up; it didn't find any federal funds. The fact that no matching funds were asked for is dubious in itself, as there are strict guidelines and safety-catches built into that system.

      Third, if a system was built which ran on the same tracks built down in the Raineir valley, everyone would be benefitting from this, rather than the relative few serviced by this and any hoped-for additions to the line.

      Fourth, those who want to save money buying a relatively new used $40,000 car aren't going to be willing to lose money on a local tax. They'll just drive where the prices are cheaper. I mean this has to be the most silly tax I've ever heard of. People who buy used cars want to save money. For them, it's worth it to go elsewhere.

      Fifth, so what? Driving from Northgate, Southcenter, the east side, or anywhere else to down town takes on the order of 40 minutes to an hour. Taking the bus from either of these locations will take at least an hour and a half.

      Sixth, the fact is that this generation of hippies/yuppies and the rest of us is so worried about our own little problems that we're not willing to sacrifice anything for the future. Do you think that the people of Seattle didn't have to sacrifice when I-5 was built? Do you think they didn't have to sacrifice in order to take advantage of the bridges and roads you ride on now?

      We ride on their backs, they've given all of us a gift that most seem unwilling to reciprocate. Any major project is going to take lots of money, lots of time, and lots of inconvenience. It's going to change the way the city looks, it's going to make some quiet places noisy, it's going to change some communities. These are all the sacrificees that those before us made.

      I hope you're right, I really do. I wan't the monorail to be something good for us, but I just can't see how it's going to be.

      --
      Notes From Under *nix: blas.phemo.us
    14. Re:Sound Transit and the Monorail by interociter · · Score: 1

      Back in the day, I used visit Seattle a couple of times a month. I'd stay at a freind's house in Queen Anne. Every Saturday, we'd walk down to the Seattle Center (4 blocks), and catch the monorail to downtown. It was cheaper than driving, we didn't have to pay parking, and I always enjoyed the quasi-futuristic trip. Once my freind moved out to the suburbs, we still took the rail. We'd park at the Seattle Center (cheap!) and rail into downtown.

      Unlike bus trips, it was ALWAYS enjoyable. I remember giving up my seat up front so a 6-year-old could get that fabulous view, and I'm a cynical prick. Another time, there was a rookie driver who had trouble lining the doors up with the platform at Westlake Center. The passengers guided him in ("Back!" "Forward a little!" "Now back!" "Got it!!! Yay!" Followed by applause.). It has ALWAYS been a fun trip. Compare that with any bus ride you've ever taken.

      Simpsons references aside, I always felt that expanding the monorail would be a good idea. It would make it a working part of a larger mass-transit system, and give Seattle yet another mark of distiction.

      Sadly, I'm in Silicon Valley, where mass transit is a bad joke. This benefits me not.

      --
      Interociter
      -=What do I want? I'm an American. I want more.
    15. Re:Sound Transit and the Monorail by mr.+roboto · · Score: 2

      First, you still haven't shown that the monorail doesn't service anything more than the two areas as stated before.

      There will be stops in West Seattle, SoDo, Pioneer Square, downtown, Belltown, the Seattle Center, Queen Anne, and Ballard. In what universe is this "two areas"? I count at least eight neighborhoods served, including the most densely populated neighborhoods in the city.

      Fourth, those who want to save money buying a relatively new used $40,000 car aren't going to be willing to lose money on a local tax. They'll just drive where the prices are cheaper. I mean this has to be the most silly tax I've ever heard of. People who buy used cars want to save money. For them, it's worth it to go elsewhere.

      Huh? Do you think it's a sales tax? It's not a sales tax: it's an 1.4% annual motor vehicle excise tax charged to all residents of the city. Are you suggesting people will move to avoid it? Moving is damn expensive, you know.

      Driving from Northgate, Southcenter, the east side, or anywhere else to down town takes on the order of 40 minutes to an hour. Taking the bus from either of these locations will take at least an hour and a half.

      Which is exactly why we need a viable rapid transit option that runs above grade, where traffic isn't an issue.

    16. Re:Sound Transit and the Monorail by bucephalis · · Score: 1

      "Huh? Do you think it's a sales tax? It's not a sales tax: it's an 1.4% annual motor vehicle excise tax charged to all residents of the city. Are you suggesting people will move to avoid it? Moving is damn expensive, you know."

      Registering it to you at the address of your friend in Auburn isn't, however.

    17. Re:Sound Transit and the Monorail by mr.+roboto · · Score: 2

      Registering it to you at the address of your friend in Auburn isn't, however.

      Yeah, well that's also fraud. If you ever had to collect on your insurance, you'd be in pretty deep shit. Plus you'd be an asshole, pulling in a friend as a conspirator in an insurance/tax fraud scam.

    18. Re:Sound Transit and the Monorail by bucephalis · · Score: 1

      So you're telling me people won't do it?
      No I didn't think so...

    19. Re:Sound Transit and the Monorail by tres · · Score: 1

      Jeebus, I'm tired of this. You all won't be satisfied until this wreck of an idea lies in flames around all our feet.

      It serves two areas. I didn't say neighborhoods, I didn't say stops I didn't say any other such thing. There are thousands of neighborhoods in Seattle. I guess these eight neighborhoods somehow deserve more than the rest.

      It's not too hard to list any address in the world on a car purchase. You want your mommie's address on your driver's license, well you can. That's the only way they know what your address is when you buy/register your car.

      And it's not charged to "all residents" it's charged to those who aren't rich enough to buy a new car every year.

      How is this going to get the people coming in from Northgate off the road? You keep talking around the central issue, all of you; the population served by this project is the population least in need. There are more pressing concerns, and more robust systems to address those concerns. All I hear is, "We'll go whizzing by while you sit in traffic." There's no solution except for the people rich enough to live in the highest priced housing in the Puget Sound.

      Monorail! Monorail! Monorail!

      --
      Notes From Under *nix: blas.phemo.us
    20. Re:Sound Transit and the Monorail by mr.+roboto · · Score: 2

      A couple dozen at most. The thing is, there's already a check on that kind of fraud--insurance companies. Since rates are based on the home address of the owner of the vehicle, insurance companies take a pretty serious interest in making sure that cars are registered at the proper address. Yeah, I'm sure people try to trick the insurance companies, but I doubt it's an epidemic. After all, you need a credit report to get insurance, so you'd have to create an entire fake identity at the alternate address in order to make it work. Plus the checks or credit card you use to pay for the insurance would have to have the right (fake) address. It would be a massive pain in the ass, and break all sorts of laws.

    21. Re:Sound Transit and the Monorail by coyotenose · · Score: 1

      The Census 2000 population of the City of Seattle
      is 563,374. A ridership of 72,000 daily would
      represent 12.78% of the entire population of Seattle. One-eight of Seattle riding the monorail every day! Not too likely, don't you think? The 22,000 ridership is from newspaper estimates based on current bus ridership. Probably much closer to the mark.

      BTW, 72,000 times 365 equals 26,280,000. This gives a result of $2.16 per rider amortized over 30 years. Of course, the weekend ridership would be much smaller, regardless of the numbers you use.

    22. Re:Sound Transit and the Monorail by mr.+roboto · · Score: 2

      I guess these eight neighborhoods somehow deserve more than the rest.

      Well, since it's pretty much impossible to build a massive rapid transit system that serves the whole city at once, it makes since to start with the most dense areas. Would you suggest that the first lines be built in places where nobody lives? How would this be sensible policy?

      It's not too hard to list any address in the world on a car purchase.

      See my responses elsewhere. It would be insurance fraud, which the insurance companies take an active role in preventing. It would be damn difficult.

      And it's not charged to "all residents" it's charged to those who aren't rich enough to buy a new car every year.

      Yeah, that 0.001% of the population is going to put a huge dent in the revenue stream.

      There's no solution except for the people rich enough to live in the highest priced housing in the Puget Sound.

      Ballard and West Seattle each contain a good amount of moderately-priced housing. There's been a recent push to build up density downtown with low-income housing. The highest priced housing in the Puget Sound area is on Mercer Island, isn't it? Plus, plans are to expand the monorail to provide service to the whole city. You have to start somewhere, though.

    23. Re:Sound Transit and the Monorail by bucephalis · · Score: 1

      " A couple dozen at most. "
      A beer at the location of your choice (assuming you're in the puget sound- South is better) says that within 18 months, there will be stories in the PI/Times about an "epidemic of"

      "Since rates are based on the home address of the owner of the vehicle, insurance companies take a pretty serious interest in making sure that cars are registered at the proper address."

      You've brought up the insurance thing a couple times now...So...
      1) Nobody is talking about trying to defraud insurance companies. I gave a quick example of how people would try to get out of this tax. If you want to rail against insurance fraud, I'll agree with you, but that's really a separate thread.
      2)Just because you give address X to the state when you purchase the vehicle doesn't mean that you can't give address Y to the insurance co when you insure it. In fact, as someone who worked (unfortunately) in the insurance industry for a number of years, it's rather common, normal, and legal. It's called a "garage address". Insurance rates are based on the garage address, NOT the home address. Insurance companies are interested in the garage address, not where they send the bill (as long as it's paid. A quick example, that I'm sure many here can relate to: I went to college in Spokane. My "garage address" was listed on my policy as Spokane. My home address was listed on my policy as my parents address (in Kent). Perfectly above board in the eyes of the insurance co. Don't honestly know whether the taxes were greater in Spokane or Kent, was simply more convienient.
      Was NOT a massive PITA, btw.

    24. Re:Sound Transit and the Monorail by mr.+roboto · · Score: 2

      Maybe you're right; but I still don't think it would be that easy. After all, even if you give your insurance company a separate garage address, you still have to give them a home address at which the car is registered, don't you? I'm thinking they wouldn't be so happy about getting a fake home address. Insurance is relevant to tax fraud simply because avoiding the tax would involve lying about your address on your vehicle registration, which would amount to giving the insurance company a fraudulent home address. Maybe it's easier than I think, but it seems to me that the added complication of dealing with the insurance company makes avoiding the tax pretty difficult. Plus, it seems that if you ever got into an accident and had to collect, there would be a chance of this all coming out, which would be a shitstorm, potentially. I'm pretty risk-adverse though, so maybe I'm just being paranoid.

    25. Re:Sound Transit and the Monorail by bucephalis · · Score: 1

      "you still have to give them a home address at which the car is registered, don't you? "

      No. At least, no it WA. You need to give a billing/contact address. Doesn't need to be your home address. Doesn't need to be the address on the Vehicle registration, either.

      Like I said, they care about the garage address, as that is what they do their actuarial (risk) calculations on. If you gave them a fake garage address, *THEN* they'd get upset, declare your policy void, and tell you to go suck an egg.

      The insurance thing is really a non-issue. The real issue is that it WOULD be tax fraud. Like I said, expect the PI/Times to do a story within the next 18 months. I'll bet they use the term "epidemic".

      Me, I'd never own a car if I lived in Seattle itself, but that's just me.

    26. Re:Sound Transit and the Monorail by tres · · Score: 1

      As I've said before, I sincerely hope it works as you think it will. But as it is now, it merely competes for dollars, for space for riders with the light rail project. It makes the end result more diffuse, and keeps cars on the road.

      At least with the roads, we didn't have medium problems like this.

      It reminds me of the days of token rings and banyan vines. People couldn't communicate because everyone wanted to do it their own way.

      --
      Notes From Under *nix: blas.phemo.us
    27. Re:Sound Transit and the Monorail by mr.+roboto · · Score: 2

      Me, I'd never own a car if I lived in Seattle itself, but that's just me.

      Well, it might be practical to go without a car if you lived downtown or on Capital Hill, but given the current state of affairs with mass transit in the city, living in any other neighborhood would suck. Unless you were a very avid bicyclist who didn't mind the rain, that is. You be stuck with either long bus rides at rush hour or infrequent stops on off hours. And forget staying out late, 'cause most bus routes stop running. Plus, parking isn't really much of an issue outside of the more crowded areas of the city.

    28. Re:Sound Transit and the Monorail by bucephalis · · Score: 1

      Agreed.
      I'd either live downtown (and occassionally use flexicar -http://www.flexcar.com/), or not in the city whatsover. I agree it would suck.
      My parents did the first option, (Harbor Steps building, kitty-corner from the SAM, Connected to Wolfgang Pucks...Or, since we're on /., about 2 blocks from the Lusty Lady...) for a few years, and it worked well for them. Never even needed a car.

      Unless I decide to get a grad degree sometime soon, I think I'd just say no, though!

    29. Re:Sound Transit and the Monorail by juan2074 · · Score: 1
      There's been a recent push to build up density downtown with low-income housing.

      The great majority of the housing that has built up density downtown (and Belltown too) has been in the luxury (high-income) market. The low-income housing that has been built has not made up for the amount that has been destroyed since 1980 to make way for other development.

      The highest priced housing in the Puget Sound area is on Mercer Island, isn't it?

      No. If you look at it by city, Hunts Point has the most-expensive houses. But some neighbourhoods in other cities are right up there. Take a look at Madison Park or Laurelhurst (Seattle) or Tiger Mountain (Issaquah) or Newport Hills (Bellevue). But the king of high-priced housing is probably a little-known area of Shoreline (south of Richmond Beach) called The Highlands. That is where the Nordstrom and Boeing families live. But it is a gated community that most people will never be allowed (invited) to enter.

    30. Re:Sound Transit and the Monorail by Ian+Bicking · · Score: 2
      Fourth, those who want to save money buying a relatively new used $40,000 car aren't going to be willing to lose money on a local tax. They'll just drive where the prices are cheaper. I mean this has to be the most silly tax I've ever heard of. People who buy used cars want to save money. For them, it's worth it to go elsewhere.
      Someone else has already pointed out this doesn't apply to this situation, but I thought I'd also note that it's also incorrect. I don't know specifically about Washington, but in most places you pay sales taxes based on where you live, not where you bought the car. In theory this is how all sales tax works, but they don't enforce it except with large sales (like cars).
    31. Re:Sound Transit and the Monorail by tres · · Score: 1

      Sorry, I was unclear.

      I did, in fact mean to reference registering at another address by way of a quick reference to "go elsewhere."

      Thanks for pointing this out.

      --
      Notes From Under *nix: blas.phemo.us
  26. Ok, I just posted their first ever link to goatse by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    hopefully they will view it in an internet cafe or something and be arrested for viewing pornography!

  27. Re:Ok, I just posted their first ever link to goat by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    didn't you know porn and sex is legal and perfectly acceptable everywhere in japan?

    even in public schools i could strip down and start wacking it in front of school aged girls who would just love to see my huge cock close and personal and not so much as get an odd look.

  28. Re:Feasability? (of air) by ensignyu · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Air travel is really expensive, and barring any major improvements in aeronautics or cutthroat competition, it's not going to get that much cheaper.

    Especially, you don't want to pay a lot if you have to travel from San Fransisco to Los Angeles every day for work, or home from college every week.

    Plus, our airports (especially SFO) are busy enough as it is. Not to mention pollution and fuel consumption. California is growing, and in 18 years (estimated completion) the problem is going to be much much worse.

  29. Paid for with a vehicle tax... by burnsy · · Score: 5, Insightful

    So those in Seattle owning a $25,000 car get to pay $350 per car per year to pay for one line of the monorail. If you have two $25K cars you get to pay $3,500 over 5 years waiting for this thing to open.

    That's a lot of jack just to make it easier to get to the ball game.

    I wonder how they are going to pay for the other 4 lines?

    1. Re:Paid for with a vehicle tax... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      One thing people facing such numbers will quickly realize (as reported by the Seattle Times) is that the tax is easily avoidable. So much so that it could jeopardize funding. That it passed by less than 1% of the vote can only anger locals enough to actually do this in droves.

    2. Re:Paid for with a vehicle tax... by Tim · · Score: 2

      "I wonder how they are going to pay for the other 4 lines?"

      Tell me about it. One thing that's made the monorail campaigning unbearable is the relatively mindless pro-monorail answer to the objection that the planned line goes nowhere. Invariably, someone says, "Yeah, but when they build the other lines, Seattle will be great!". Of course, no one has ever really, seriously thought about the practicality of those other lines, or where the funding will come from.

      It drives me up the wall, I tell you. If the planners had just put a little bit of thought into the first line, it might be something to get excited over. But the thing that was approved is basically just a multi-billion dollar white elephant.

      --
      Let's try not to let fact interfere with our speculation here, OK?
    3. Re:Paid for with a vehicle tax... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Hmmm... let me estimate what my new excise tax will be... Let's see, $80,000 sports car plus $30,000 SUV...

      Oh crap.

    4. Re:Paid for with a vehicle tax... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Ha Ha, serves you right muthafucka

    5. Re:Paid for with a vehicle tax... by bscottid · · Score: 1

      The new monorail authority will soon be talking to the feds about funding for the next line. Since we're paying for the first line all by ourselves, it will be counted as the local matching portion of the next part. Thus, we'll be able to get enough federal funding to cover the majority of the cost of the next one.

      Plus, all the follow-on lines are much cheaper. I bet the next one will be the purple line from UW to Ballard. It's much shorter with no water crossings - probably in the $500 million range.

    6. Re:Paid for with a vehicle tax... by mosch · · Score: 1
      first of all, most people aren't going to want to bother signing up for a po box outside the city to use for one thing, to save less money than they spend on coffee or dry cleaning.

      secondly, most people don't want to engage in ethically questionable behaviour just because it's legal.

      thirdly, it's inconvenient. who wants to spend their time opening up a po box, changing registered addresses, then remembering (once a year) to go pick up something from that box.

      lastly, there are a limited number of post office boxes in every post office. if 2 million people decided to go get a post office box tomorrow, 99.9% of them would be told that they're on a waiting list.

      yeah, some cheap bastards will do this, but most people will just bitch and moan and get on with life.

  30. Nobody Rides the Rail in California! by IrvineHosting · · Score: 1

    [quote]It's also worth pointing out that in the recent california election, a pair of bills were passed which put aside approximately $10b for the construction of California's high speed rail project. [/quote] This is great dude; money that could be well spent on fixing our dire freeway situation is wasted on rail systems nobody will use. Anyone else love taking the 91 home to Corona??

    1. Re:Nobody Rides the Rail in California! by cbuskirk · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Corona to Irvine and back on the 91 whether you use the toll road or not is a crappy route for sure. I personally love the Metrolink. Having gotten caught on the preiously mentioned toll road driving just a little too fast forced me to take the train for a while. I found it to be a very good experience. My stress level dropped greatly, and got to work on time much more often. If they spent some of that $10b on extending the hours of Metrolink and bringing down the high cost of riding, it would be perfect.

    2. Re:Nobody Rides the Rail in California! by IrvineHosting · · Score: 1

      I have taken it once. Metrolink is EXPENSIVE. And when I took it I lived in fullerton by the railway station, but still it was too far to walk. So I haven't figured out the advantage yet when I have to drive to the railway station and then get from the arrival station to work. I recall it being kinda slow too. Maybe we do need that rail system.

    3. Re:Nobody Rides the Rail in California! by TClevenger · · Score: 1

      Sure Metrolink is expensive ($276 per month from San Bernardino to Irvine), but it sure beats putting 40,000 miles a year on my car. Even in my Metro (40 mpg), I just about break even once you throw in the Toll Roads.

      Metrolink gets me to the Irvine station in the same amount of time that taking the Toll Roads on a GOOD day does, and my Honda Helix (55 mpg) gets me from the station to work in less than 5 minutes. During that time, I can surf wirelessly or read instead of burning up my clutch disc at the 91/15 suckage.

      That said, grade-separated high-speed rail from Irvine/Riverside to Stockton (where my folks live) will do the job much more quickly and cheaply than driving (6-8 hours) or flying (1.25 hours plus getting to the airport two hours ahead of time, plus driving down from Sacramento or across from San Jose.) Amtrak would be fine if they could get a rail line over the Tehachapis so you don't have to take a bus to Bakersfield first.

      Tim

  31. Yah right it really "passed" by Com2Kid · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Passed by 800 votes, heh.

    Huge tax increase to pay for it, 1.75 billion for FOURTEEN MILES OF FRIGGIN TRACK

    Whoopitidy do da.

    1. Re:Yah right it really "passed" by joew · · Score: 1

      let me just add to this.. bush won florda by 537 votes... and in the end that had a much much larger effect...

    2. Re:Yah right it really "passed" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You've got to be kidding me. It's amazing that those drug partial-legalization measures didn't pass. Who ever voted for this had to be smoking something.

    3. Re:Yah right it really "passed" by ameoba · · Score: 2, Funny

      Actually, the monorail is just part of a plan to reduce traffic in the region. The idea is to simultaniously come up with an ass-load of new taxes to cover stupid, useless, projects while also driving out major employers and cutting funding for education. The net result will be to force people to move to other states, reducing the population to pre-1990 levels, returning traffic to a somewhat sane level.

      --
      my sig's at the bottom of the page.
    4. Re:Yah right it really "passed" by Aexia · · Score: 2

      I look forward to seeing your brilliant yet reasonably priced alternative.

  32. Re:please stop for the love of the simpsons by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Oh my god! They ruined South Park!

    You BASTARDS!

  33. That California plan is lame... by aquarian · · Score: 4, Interesting

    I'm all for high speed rail in CA. They've been talking for years about linking Anaheim to Las Vegas, etc. And the Amtrak Metrolinks between LA and its suburbs have been extremely popular. They started up after the Northridge earthquake in '92 destroyed many of the freeways. Once people started using taking the train, they were hooked.

    But looking at this plan, the obvious, important routes seem to be missing -- particularly LA/OC to the Bay Area. *A lot* of people make this trip every day by plane. High speed rail would do wonders for our airport congestion, and air quality (next to cars, planes going into and out of LAX are the biggest source of smog).

    And who goes to Bakersfield, anyway? Sounds to me like a big land owner with some pull in Sacramento is behind this. Fresno would be the logical choice for service in that region -- after all, it's the next biggest metropolis behind the "big three," and probably the fastest growing.

    1. Re:That California plan is lame... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Actually, as far as development goes, Bakersfield is going faster than Fresno. I agree that the LA -> SF route _must_ be included if the rail is ever going to get the use it really needs, but I see no problem with the link to Bakersfield. It is at the bottom of the central valley, after all... and close to LA.

    2. Re:That California plan is lame... by jlund · · Score: 2, Informative

      One look at the "Recommended Routes to be Studied in the Environmental Process" one will notice that they include the BAY AREA... Possible Route Map

    3. Re:That California plan is lame... by Joe+Rumsey · · Score: 2

      Don't you mean the "big four"?

      Los Angeles
      Bay Area
      Sacramento
      San Diego

      I'm not sure if you looked at the route map or just read the list of routes. The list doesn't really describe it as well as the map. Bakersfield and Fresno are both on the route from LA to SF. It looks like it's about the same route as highway 99 from LA to Merced, then branches off to SF and Sacramento. It could be slightly more direct between LA and SF by following I5's route, but then it would miss both Bakersfield and Fresno. This way the "big six" are all covered, and it is, after all, high speed rail, so it should still be pretty fast :-)

    4. Re:That California plan is lame... by MalleusEBHC · · Score: 2

      I don't if the parent is a troll, a little slow, or some combination thereof, but how the hell did it get modded up to +5?

      If you would look at the route map you would see that it covers pretty much all the major parts of the Bay Area. Once in the Bay Area you could use BART and/or Caltrains to get around.

      For the Norcal to/from Socal commuters, the rail does go out of the way a little when it goes through the Central Valley, but this is probably a good idea so that it covers growing areas like Fresno and Bakersfield and can get to Merced more easily for when the UC goes in there. A line that branches off after the Grapevine and heads straight to Los Banos rather than through those other stops would speed things up some for those commuters, but I don't think the extra costs would be worth it.

      Finally, the Northridge quake was in '94.

    5. Re:That California plan is lame... by Goldsmith · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Wow...

      Perhaps you should actually look at what is planned.

      I am one of the people who take the existing train regularly (various places from San Diego to Chatsworth), it's quite nice, but very, very slow. It is faster for me to drive.

      You complain that the train won't cover those popular routes... the reason the train is so slow right now is that it stops every 15 minutes to let people on and off. When you have to cover 150 miles, that can get really old. The planned train covers the exact same route the existing train does, but without stopping at EVERY neighborhood. (There are ONLY 11 stops planned in the LA/OC area right now.)

      But wait, there's more!

      It also goes to LAX, and the Bay Area! It even will link up with the excellent transit system they already have there. The bill we just passed was to fund specifically the San Francisco/LA link.

      For some reason, you seem to object the train stopping Barstow... even though it's the only thing in between Los Angeles and Fresno! (It does stop in Fresno by the way. In fact... the whole thing is the work of the state Senate representative from Fresno - Jim Costa!) You should look at the geography of the state some time... look at how much space there is between Fresno and Barstow. They're not exactly right next to eachother.

      Additionally, I don't know if you've been to Barstow, but it's not exactly an upscale community. (By the way... you'll notice there is NO stop in Palm Springs.)

      I grew up in San Diego, and I fully support the train simply for what it will do there.

      I don't know how you got your ideas on this bill. You suspect "a big land owner with some pull in Sacramento is behind this". It's actually a farmer from Fresno who is "behind this". He does have pull in Sacramento though... he's a Senator there.

    6. Re:That California plan is lame... by Galvatron · · Score: 2

      Yes, but it is not linked directly to Sacramento or LA, so it's not terribly useful. I'm really not sure who this train service is targetted for. I guess if you're in Freso, it'd be great, or it'd be great for me in San Francisco visiting my girlfriend in Redwood City (ought to be faster than Caltrain), but other than that, I just don't see the point.

      --
      "The question of whether a computer can think is no more interesting than that of whether a submarine can swim" -EWD
    7. Re:That California plan is lame... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I think the biggest omission is a high speed rail link directly between the Bay Area and Sacramento!

    8. Re:That California plan is lame... by crotherm · · Score: 2

      My problem with this plan is the routes proposed.

      Why in the hell is the link from the central valley to the coastal areas go via the 152? Many more people could use the train if they made a link directly from Sacramento to the Bay Area. Hell, most of the people who live in Tracy work in the Bay Area. And that comute sucks. Besides, who wants to go to Gilroy, Garlic capital of the world, anyways. I bet those folks who live in between Tracy and the Bay Area used some of their dollars to insure some large rail project did not ruin their little towns.

      --
      "Those who make peaceful revolution impossible, make violent revolution inevitable" - JFK
    9. Re:That California plan is lame... by aaarrrgggh · · Score: 2

      Fair enough, but there is the Capitol Corridor train service. It's probablly a better investment now to focus on the north-south routes because of the overall geography of the state.

      Eventually there will be a high speed link from Sacremento to Oakland... maybe not this project, but if the train is viable to LA then something will happen.

    10. Re:That California plan is lame... by Dirtside · · Score: 2

      Minor historical note: The Northridge quake was January 17, 1994, at 4:31 AM PST, not 1992. The riots were in 1992. :)

      --
      "Destroy science and religion. Science would re-emerge exactly the same; but not religion." - Penn Jillette, paraphrased
  34. Good to see.... by bezza · · Score: 1
    It is good to see some governements taking a step foward with high-speed mass transit. ANYTHING to get away from the reliance on the automobile.

    But when I see this happening in my home city it makes me upset. An excerpt from the above link...

    The Monorail was opened to the public in 1988 as part of Australia's Bicentennial celebrations though has been somewhat maligned by many as a white elephant and eyesore with some people over the years lobbying for the NSW Government to tear it down.

    Sydney fell for the glamour of the monorail (much like Springfield did) because a monorail has that sort of allure associated with it. This is what is now happening.

    I hope Seattle and California go through with this and most importantly stick with it...even if it is not profiting hugely. The number of cars it will take off the road will be worth it.

    --
    WARNING: This sig does not contain a joke
  35. Old train tracks by MichaelPenne · · Score: 2

    Make great bike routes!

    Don't like to peddle, get an electric bike, 20 miles for ~1cent of e.

    & fresh air, yummm.

  36. what arguments? I've heard few... by djupedal · · Score: 2

    Seems easier to build a train or monorail station in downtown Seattle or SF (underground?), than it would be to drop another airport nearby. Airports seem to eat up acreage without remorse. The freeways have an empty zone down the middle just waiting for a high-speed train track.

    And note that Japan has a very reliable system for controlling bullet trains during earthquakes. Of course, getting 2k passengers off a parked train, in the middle of no where, is another issue...but at least they're alive.

    1. Re:what arguments? I've heard few... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      that's a brilliant idea. Except, of course, the monorail isn't going anywhere near a freeway.

    2. Re:what arguments? I've heard few... by Rick+the+Red · · Score: 2
      The freeways have an empty zone down the middle just waiting for a high-speed train track.
      Uh, no, they don't. The "empty zone" in most places is a Jersy barrier and a sliver of asphalt barely wide enough to pull out of the way if you get a flat. There's nowhere near enough room for a train track, but more than enough for monorail supports. Go Mono!

      --
      If all this should have a reason, we would be the last to know.
  37. Don't blame me, I voted for Kodos by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    n/t

  38. Re:Feasibility? by Experiential · · Score: 1

    Oh yeah,I saw the documentary on that down in Anaheim. Some guy named walt and his friends? Animated? Pictures of vertical freeways and flying cars? Yes, we definitely need research on this, but you're gonna be able to crowd-surf to work before we'll get a viable mass-transportation solution out of it.

  39. What is it with these damn PDFs? by aquarian · · Score: 2

    What is it with government agencies and their damn PDFs? Is it so hard to take the text file used to create them, and make HTML pages instead? I'm all for PDF where stuff needs to be printed out, but I'd rather have people read stuff on screen, and save trees. Reading PDFs on screen is a pain.

    1. Re:What is it with these damn PDFs? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      better than .DOC files.

  40. It Only Barely Passed by Galahad2 · · Score: 2

    The monorail only barely passed because of how they're paying for it. Virtually everyone in Seattle agrees that we need some system of mass transit (we probably have the worst traffic problem of any city in the United States, except for a very few, like LA), and a monorail is an attractive choice. It only passed by like three hundred votes, though, since how they're paying for it is all screwed up. Rather than having a flat tax or something, they're making it so the amount you pay is tied to the number of cars you own. That is, the less likely you are to use it, the more you have to pay for it.

    I only voted for it because I live in West Seattle, so it _directly_ benefits me. My house is only a few miles away from the planned site. I'm actually pretty surprised that it passed; I guess we're really desperate for a system of mass transit. Incidentily, my friend's house is right next to the site of the track, so their land value is going to go down the tube. They're planning on moving before they break ground.

    1. Re:It Only Barely Passed by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's unlikely their land values will decrease; would *you* pay more to be right next to a 5 minute ride to downtown? Chicago's El (which is like an order of magnitude more noisey than the projected monorail) has increased nearby land values.

  41. High Speed Rail by bkontr · · Score: 1

    I think high speed in CA is a great idea that will serve that state well... it makes perfect sense to me to prepare for future/present transportation needs.

    The monorail project in Seattle is good idea also, but I think the cost per mile is going to be a little steep for taxpayers. As long as they remember to save some money to keep up the roads, keep the buses running, and maintain the bridges I think they'll be OK. Seattle has had some trouble keeping up it's infrastructure...or so I've heard.

    --


    "You helped our nation celebrate its bicentennial in 17 -- 1976." --George W. Bush, to Queen Elizabeth, Wash
  42. Possible interference from oil and/or auto firms? by JessLeah · · Score: 4, Interesting

    On the one hand, this is an absolutely wonderful idea whose time, I have felt for quite some time, has long since come. On the other hand, I remember a bit of my history, and I am a bit afraid that Big Oil and/or the big car companies might throw a spanner into this plan.

    If you'll remember, in the past, this nation had a lot more trolley, El, and miscellaneous sorts of commuter train tech infrastructure than it does now. In a sort of ghastly partnership, the big automotive interests convinced local governments to rip out the trolley tracks, the El lines, and the like-- and replace them with (what else) buses. And roads-- more roads for more cars.

    Only in the most heavily populated areas, where trains are almost a necessity, do commuter trains still exist. I live just to the West of New York City (in the Newark/Jersey City area), and HERE we DO have commuter trains-- just here in the NYC area, we have the subway, the PATH, the Hudson-Bergen Light Rail, the Long-Island Railroad, Metro-North, NJ Transit trains, and regular Amtrak service to nearby cities in Connecticut.

    But I recognize that my beloved NYC metro area is the exception-- not the rule.

    What happens when Ford (or another giant car company-- or an oil company) waves a cool million bucks under the Seattle politicians' collective noses?

  43. Vancouver's SkyTrain is pretty neat... by otis+wildflower · · Score: 2, Informative

    ... Operated remotely via cameras, and the stations are quite nice, at least in the summertime.. I got from downtown to Commercial Dr (to find some used cds and wander around ;) quickly and easily on it.. I think it's technically just an elevated train and not a monorail proper, but it looks all futuristic..

    I wonder how much it cost?

    1. Re:Vancouver's SkyTrain is pretty neat... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      i live in Vancouver, and use the SkyTrain a few days every week. The first skytrain line was built 17 years ago for Expo 86 in Vancouver, and recently a 2nd line attached to the first was added for a total track length of 49KM which connects through 4-5 cities here. Not sure how much the whole thing cost to build, but the new "Millenium" line cost $4 billion canadian to build, and was finished over a year behind schedule, finally opening at the end of last summer. Tickets prices keep going up too, for all 3 zones it is $4 for 1.5 hours for an adult on weekdays and before 6:30pm, but you can also ride the buses and seabus with it too.

    2. Re:Vancouver's SkyTrain is pretty neat... by C_To · · Score: 1

      We have the same exact train system as the SkyTrain here in Toronto, based upon the ICTS technology from the 80s. For the record, most people who live near them despise the them for the noise, although for most of the trip, its on the ground. The original plan was for Toronto to use these trains for less dense population zones, and leave the downtown core being serviced by subway trains. However due to public outcry and problems, the project of continuing the segment of track, and to use the system on projects here fell through. The system is now old, runs slowly at times and has issues in the winter when it comes to snow and was nothing more than a ploy to sell and showcase the Canadian made ICTS technology.

    3. Re:Vancouver's SkyTrain is pretty neat... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      SkyTrain in Vancouver is elevated "light rail", using linear motors - the guideways are bigger because it runs on two tracks, not just one, and it's steel-on-steel so it's louder than the Seattle Monorail will be [rubber-on-concrete].

      What's nice about the SkyTrain in Van is that it operates break-even; it's a totally automated system, like Seattle's Monorail will be; and it uses the 'honor system' for fare collection, which I *hope* the Seattle Popular Monorail Authority will choose for our system here. Vancouver's numbers suggest less than 5% fare avoidance with the honor system, compared to nearly 10% of the project costs in turnstiles and ticket booths [plus ongoing labor expenses].

    4. Re:Vancouver's SkyTrain is pretty neat... by otis+wildflower · · Score: 1

      Buffalo's light rail also has an honor system plus free-ridership aboveground, but they definitely do patrol the trains and issue $20 tickets (back when I went to school there) to cheaters..

      I didn't see any fuzz on the SkyTrain, but being in Canada I'm sure EVERYONE is doing the right thing ;)

  44. Or, put another way by Backov · · Score: 1

    The more you contribute to the problem, the more you pay for the solution.

    Sounds a lot more rational now doesn't it?

    Cheers,
    Backov

    --
    In the law there is no overlap between theft and copyright infringement whatsoever.
  45. Typical Seattle by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Sounds like another pie in the sky transit plan for Seattle that will never work. Lets face it mass transit just doesn't work out west. There are very few successful transit systems in the US. They just turn into big leeches on tax payers wallets.

    Fuck the poor they can walk, its good for them.

    1. Re:Typical Seattle by stefanlasiewski · · Score: 5, Insightful

      There are very few successful transit systems in the US. They just turn into big leeches on tax payers wallets.

      And I suppose you think the roads are free?

      I use mass transit 'out west' all the time (I used to commute daily on BART). It works great. It's faster then driving. I get to read my book. And it requires less federal subsidies then the roads.

      I'd love to have a train that goes down to LA.

      --
      "Can of worms? The can is open... the worms are everywhere."
  46. d'oh! by sundip01 · · Score: 0

    [marge] there's a man here that can help you
    [homer] is it batman?
    [marge] no, he's a scientist...
    [homer] ...batman's a scientist!

    sorry, I just couldn't help myself...

  47. The amazing thing about all this is... by teamhasnoi · · Score: 2

    Senator Hollings somehow managed to get all the monorails to converge on the Magic Kingdom where you *won't* be allowed to listen to "It's a Small World After All" and you will have to buy a seat license from Larry Ellingson.

  48. You forget... by pediddle · · Score: 1

    ... that it only had like 50.23% of the vote. At one point during the absantee balot counting, it trailed by 3 votes. It wasn't exactly a mandate from the people, or an amazing grassroots landslide of people who thought it would solve all our transportation issues.

    I live in Seattle (I even live in West Seattle, so the monorail would benefit me), but I would have much rather had the state-wide transportation bill that failed. That bill would be paid for by a $.09 gas tax, while the monorail benefits only a small number of people and will cost me several hundred dollars a year on my car tabs.

  49. Cars or Monorail-trains? Why not combine? by NKJensen · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Well, this system combines the advantages of trains with the flexibility of cars.

    Seems to be a great idea to me - I'm not related to the inventor, "Jensen" is just a very common name in Denmark.

    --
    -- From Denmark
    1. Re:Cars or Monorail-trains? Why not combine? by Niles_Stonne · · Score: 2

      The RUF system is a great concept! I think that it should be brought to the attention of many major cities - if multiple cities could agree on a system like this It could produce a very efficient transportation system for the entire nation.

      Hm... Sounds like time to start playing with prototypes :)

      --
      Sticks and Stones may break my bones, but copyright will always protect me.
    2. Re:Cars or Monorail-trains? Why not combine? by madPatter · · Score: 1

      Interesting concept, but if the speed is 20 mph at the junctions, won't traffic bottleneck at the junctions and reduce the whole system to 20 mph.

      I'm also having a hard time visualizing how there wouldn't be massive traffic jams at the junctions (from vehicles getting on and off).

  50. Clue time by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Interesting

    (Mods: the parent is not insightful). Out here in the west, we do not have the density that the east coast has. Most places use busses for mass transit. They are in the same rat maze that your car is in, therefore, they have no advantage. Many ppl will not bother with them. This effect was seen here in denver, co. Each time an LTR segment was built the local republican would fight it and say that it could not be succsussful therefore we should build lanes of traffic or turn the HOV lanes into toll roads. So far, every segment of LTR has been deluged with all sort of ppl. When I have to go into denver, esp in the evening, I take the LTR. It beats driving with a bumch of drunks on the road.
    The problem with LTR is that it is also in traffic, has crashes, and can not be automated. Monorail can be automated, never crashes, and literally rides above it all at a cost cheaper than an elevated LTR (Chicago's L) an a fraction of the cost of the east coast subways (which I paid for with my tax money).
    go monorail.

    1. Re:Clue time by Osty · · Score: 1

      elevated LTR (Chicago's L)

      That's "El", as in "elevated", not "L" as in "the letter L".

    2. Re:Clue time by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      maybe a monorail in seattle is stupid, but the voters have voted for it 3 freakin times, so maybe seattleites know something you don't.

    3. Re:Clue time by smithmc · · Score: 1


      a fraction of the cost of the east coast subways (which I paid for with my tax money)

      Huh? Do you have any idea how old the NYC subway is? How did "your" tax money pay for it?

      (BTW, I'm not a big proponent of mass transit myself , but I've gotta say that the NYC subway system is a triumphal example of how effective it can be. Where else can you ride almost 50 miles for a buck and a half?)

      --
      Downmodding is the refuge of the weak. Don't downmod, make a better argument!
    4. Re:Clue time by the+Dragonweaver · · Score: 1

      Thankfully, T-REX will put in a light rail line down from the center of Denver to the "Tech Center" huge office conglomerate area.

      The only problem is that it will be FOUR MORE YEARS before this happens.

      And I'm not *even* going to rant about the idiots who axed a particular bus line to a mall because they didn't want the "riff-raff" able to shop there... and of course, the "riff-raff" they were complaining about were the same folks who WORK in the mall and who now have to have access to a car to get there...

      --
      Actually I am a lab rat in an elaborate plot to take over the world.
    5. Re:Clue time by juan2074 · · Score: 1

      You're damn right! The subway is a great way to get around the city. And the density of NYC makes it possible to get from most subway stations to where you want to go on foot. Going underground sure beats sitting in traffic.

  51. The Monorail is a pinko bastard by sprintkayak · · Score: 2, Insightful

    The monorail won't work. By the Metro's (our bus system) own estimates, 85% of monorail potential riders already ride the bus. So it's not going to take a whole lot of people off the road.
    The monorail is being paid for by vehicle taxes. So the people who don't need to ride the monorail are the ones being taxed for it. That's not grassroots, it's socialist.

    1. Re:The Monorail is a pinko bastard by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

      The monorail is being paid for by vehicle taxes. So the people who don't need to ride the monorail are the ones being taxed for it. That's not grasroots, it's socialist.

      I'm always confused by people who complain that public transit is socialist, but never utter one peep about the roads.

      The roads are subsized by vehicle tax, sales tax, federal tax, etc. Washington receives _alot_ of federal money for the highways, and seattle has _alot_ of highways. How much did the 405/5 interchange cost? How much did it cost to build that big tunnel for the freeway. Sounds pretty socialist to me...

      Why do you complain about rail being socialist and not the road system? Why the double standard?

    2. Re:The Monorail is a pinko bastard by sprintkayak · · Score: 1
      Everyone uses the roads. The Monorail is going to be used by a very small group of people and paid for by many other people. I'm all for paying for roads by usage. Like gas taxes.

      I just had to vent about NEW spending.

    3. Re:The Monorail is a pinko bastard by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      The monorail is being paid for by vehicle taxes. So the people who don't need to ride the monorail are the ones being taxed for it.

      No, it's the mouth-breathing SUV-driving traffic-congestion-causing morons who don't see a problem with buying yet another car to drive in the city who shall now pay for the monorail, which is exactly as it should be.

      Also, Metro has no clue whatsoever. They lost their credibility with the bus tunnel. The monorail will attract plenty of new riders, and if Metro ridership goes down even further and the city can run fewer of those smog-pumping behemoths, that's a Good Thing.

    4. Re:The Monorail is a pinko bastard by tomakaze · · Score: 0

      RE:That's not grassroots, it's socialist.

      Damn straight on that.

      --
      ------- "A Communist is just a Socialist with a gun in a hurry" - unknown
  52. Better than $16b for the viaduct by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It's a lot better than the $16,000,000,000 to do about 5 miles of the Alaskan Way Viaduct.

  53. Re:Feasability? Stuff 140 million by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

    people into California and maybe you would have a point. Actually it would be like stuffing 140 million people into a narrow 10 mile band near the pacific coast. (most of japan is mountainous)
    As it stands, California, a state that is 10s of billions in the whole already will now start a project similar in stupidity and pork as the THE BIG DIG in boston. Projects that the everyone in the usa will be paying for.

  54. High Speed trained doomed by election loopholes by cbuskirk · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Most progressive legislation like this is doomed to fail in California. I envision a situation similar to an insurance bill that failed to pass two years ago.
    In 2004 proponents of the bill will spend a hundred million dollars on getting the bills passed. There will be suprisingly little opposition to the bill, and perhaps support from unlilkly sources such as oil companies, because they want to look like the good guys. The bills will pass by a very narrow margin, because most people hate to pass bills that spend money. The next several years will be spent in commities (chaired and staffed by "transportion experts aka auto and oil execs") at great expence and on studies.
    In 2006 lobbying firms from companies who faked support for the bills will put nearly identical bills on the ballot. They will then spend 10 million dollars on a campain to defeat the bill and nullify the previous one. Since the bill has already passed once, there will be no great large support for re-passage of the bills and they will get crushed in the election.
    This exact same thing happened in 2000 when insurance lobbyists defeated thier own insurance bill which was identical to one passed by Califorina legisature to curtail abuse by the insurance compainies. They only needed to spend a few bucks (~10 mil) on some commercials talking about ambulance chasers and insurance fraud to get a landlide victory and a windfall for the insurace companies.

    1. Re:High Speed trained doomed by election loopholes by Goldsmith · · Score: 1

      Insurance politics in California is just about as corrupt as politics can possibly get. I have much more faith in the transportation people.

      Wait... I just remembered that the state had decided about 15 years ago that by 2005 every new car sold in California would not run on gasoline. Now not only is that not happening, Davis is making Bush look like an environmentalist by refusing to conform to gas additive standards simply because the old additive is manufactured here.

      Right... never mind, it will never happen.

    2. Re:High Speed trained doomed by election loopholes by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      From what I remember, the rail is mostly planned out at this point, and building would take only a couple years to begin.

      The groups supporting high-speed rail are currently mainly the group that's doing all the planning, a group that does promoting, the company that makes the trains, and environmental organizations like the Sierra Club and the Green Party.

      I haven't heard of any oil or auto companies taking any stance on the issue yet, and I don't think they will in '04.

  55. where are you getting your numbers? by Preposterous+Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful
    (a) Light rail $14 million per mile? More like $200 million ($2.9 billion for 14 miles).
    (b) And downtown.
    (c) People like their cars, so I have to believe almost any new mass transit system here will get most of its riders from buses, not from cars, initially. My hope is that this is just the first phase of many, and that ultimately a larger system (and one not subject to traffic jams because it doesn't run at grade level) *would* ultimately get people out of their cars.
    (d) I don't follow. The monorail tax is based on the current value of your car, so if you're driving an old clunker you pay very little, and if you're driving a new SUV/Lexus/whatever you'll pay quite a bit more.
    (e) Light rail won't go to the airport either (at least not in the first phase), you know.
    (f) Heaven forbid cities and regions should take the initiative and spend the money to try to fix problems themselves instead of relying on the generosity of the Feds (or more precisely, the other 250 million-plus U.S. citizens who DON'T live in or near Seattle).

    So it passed by 800 votes. Last time I checked, the state constitution didn't say anything about initiatives being any less valid because they got voted in with a slim majority. If I-776 (reducing license tabs, etc.) had only passed by an 800-vote majority, would you be as eager to decry it?

    As for the fact that only 45% of people voted, as far as I'm concerned, the other 55% have no right to complain about the results.

    --

    "Biped! Good cranial development. Evidently considerable human ancestry."
    1. Re:where are you getting your numbers? by Osty · · Score: 1

      My hope is that this is just the first phase of many, and that ultimately a larger system (and one not subject to traffic jams because it doesn't run at grade level) *would* ultimately get people out of their cars.

      You'll get my combustion engine when you pry it from my cold dead hands. Mmm ... 2.7L flat six ... dr00l.

    2. Re:where are you getting your numbers? by Zebbers · · Score: 1

      i prefer my 5.7 v8 but hey whatever gets you off ;)

    3. Re:where are you getting your numbers? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I prefer the 350 as well, but I've also driven and ridden quite a few miles in a BMW M3.

      For seat of your pants ride (including engine), ahhhhh.. 3 liters that will make you feel like you're in a very fast go-kart! :)

      F body or Vette?

    4. Re:where are you getting your numbers? by Daetrin · · Score: 2
      So it passed by 800 votes. Last time I checked, the state constitution didn't say anything about initiatives being any less valid because they got voted in with a slim majority. If I-776 (reducing license tabs, etc.) had only passed by an 800-vote majority, would you be as eager to decry it?

      I was decrying that even at the majority it passed at, although i might have complained a little more if the margin had been so narrow.

      --
      This Space Intentionally Left Blank
  56. What's the big thing ? by mailuefterl · · Score: 1

    I'm from good ol' Europe (Austria) and I really wonder, what's the big thing about monorails?
    I haven't heard or read a word about any projects in Europe and nobody seems to care about the here, but in the US they seem to be "the next big thing" in transportation.
    What makes them so appealing?
    What are the real advantages?

    1. Re:What's the big thing ? by silentbozo · · Score: 5, Insightful

      In the US, land is cheap (land outside of major developed areas, that is.) Laws and taxes are such that building housing developments, and selling the idea of owning your own home is quite profitable, environmental impact be damned. As a result, sprawling residential developments spring up all over the place, overloading existing infrastructure (power, roads, telecommunications, sewer, water, hospital/school/police/fire.)

      As more and more people move out into the boonies (and enduring 1-2hr commute times to and back from work), they demand improvements, like highway widening, more roads, etc. The growing tax base, and larger residential population now justify development of commercial properties, such as shopping malls - and guess who owns the land? Yep, the original developers, or attached arms thereof. Soon the area incorporates, and the politicans of that burblet start clamoring for state and federal funds to fix the mess that the developers created.

      In the meantime, everyone who lives between the newly spawned burblet and where most of the residents work has to share increased commute times due to vehicle congestion, and greater pollution. Mass transit using buses fails miserably in this kind of situation, as buses have to share the roads with the worsening traffic, trapping mass transit riders in a commuter's nightmare. Solutions using rail, be it subway, commuter light rail, or a monorail/peoplemover, where the mass transit solution has right of way, are far superior, as you can cut commute times in half and thereby offer a reasonable and useful alternative to driving your own car.

      Realistically though, unless all the burblets are in a straight line, leading to the commercial/industrial section of the city (hehe, simcity - a great urban planning tool), retrofitting any area with rail transit is an expensive and questionable pursuit. The key thing is right of way - and high density development around that right of way. Current development is low density, and unless you want to force people to rezone the properties along the proposed rail line, there won't be enough people riding mass transit to make it viable for the short to mid-term. In the long term, the idea is that having a rail line will convince people to re-orient their lives around it - but without a critical mass of transit options (a train that goes 3 miles is not useful), nobody's gonna ride it.

  57. Minnesota by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Here in MN we don't have a monorail, but we've got one light-rail going in between downtown minneapolis, the mall of america, and the airport. There was a big fight against (from a very vocal minority) it but in the end it went in. There are also plans of putting in light rails from all four corners of the metro area (mpls area is very sprawled out for those who don't know). Right now, the next one is the one that goes from NW suburbs to downtown and there is some opposition in the right places to block it so far. However, numerous polls show that the majority are in favor of it. So we'll see.

    1. Re:Minnesota by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Actually, I forgot. We do have one monorail that sits about 15-25ft above the MN Zoo -- gives you a nice tour heh.

  58. Re:Feasability? Stuff 140 million by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It's a long-term 30-or-so year bond measure, so we're not going to see the effects immediately. I don't see how the "everyone in the usa" works out, unless you're making some rather forward predictions.

    The point of the other argument is that earthquakes didn't bother Japan. Obviously, mass transit is vital and highly usable in Japan, but that doesn't mean we need identitical conditions ... and btw, Japan's population is more like 120 million.

  59. Monorail is a tragedy in Seattle by Tim · · Score: 5, Insightful

    "It was too obvious even to the corrupt, however, that the rail system absolutely couldn't be done for any reasonable amount of money, and it's been in a perpetual state of falling over dead and being resurrected for the past 8 years or so."

    You're being disingenuous. Sound Transit has had lots of trouble in Seattle for the same reason that any major public construction initiative has trouble in Seattle: the town is too politically correct for it's own good. Whereas many (most) other cities of Seattle's population have city managers with the power/authority to make decisions based upon engineering and technical criteria without putting issues to a vote, Seattle is hamstrung with a ridiculously political design/build process. Furthermore, the number of NIMBYs, owl-lovers and salmon saviors here attack any project that even looks sidelong at a stream or a standing puddle. It's a nightmare proposition for actually getting things done. The only reason the monorail people haven't hit this particular wall yet is because their line is only about five percent planned. And any engineer worth his sliderule will tell you that the true costs of a project don't become apparent until around the 30% mark.

    You're right about one thing, though: Monorail has always been a populist initiative here in Seattle. Unfortunately, that doesn't make it a smart initiative. No matter how many intelligent, well-spoken engineers have pointed out the technical deficiencies of monorail for the Seattle landscape (and there have been many over the years), the populist beatniks have continued to mindlessly beat on the monorail drum. There's a reason that the Seattle Monorail has been called a technical solution waiting for a problem.

    It's really sad, actually. Seattle is almost the textbook definition of the word "tragedy": a city with unbelievable potential, that is comepletely and utterly hamstrung by its political characteristics.

    --
    Let's try not to let fact interfere with our speculation here, OK?
    1. Re:Monorail is a tragedy in Seattle by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      (mods: the parent is another not insightful) The problems that you describe happen in every state except for texas where you buy off the politician. Do you really want your city to look like Dallas or Houston? Yeah, I thought so.

      Now another clue time about engineers and monorail. There have been a small number of engineers who have spoken against monorail (vast mjority of transportation engineers have spoken FOR monorail). They all acknowledge that grade seperation is good. They also say that rubber tires are quieter (but cost a bit more to run - 1%). They also acknowledge that monorail is cheaper to build than elevated ltr or sunken any rail. So what is bad about monorail? It is not a tried and true system. In other words, it is not tested. These words come from engineers that work for LTR systems or roads.
      The fact that Disney World carries as many passenger each day as does the denver RTD has seem to ecscaped their attention, after all it is DisneyWorld. The fact that Disney's Monorail has carried that amount since its' opening also ecscapes their attention. The fact that they have NO fatalities and that operation costs are a fraction of denver's RTD also seems to be amiss. BTW, that is just 1 system. There are a number of other monorails throughout the world. Those that have been geared for carrying daily passengers are actually profitable. There is no other rail system in existence today that caries only passengers that makes a profit.

    2. Re:Monorail is a tragedy in Seattle by grgyle · · Score: 1

      Seattleite here also... I feel you have unwittingly made what I feel is the greatest argument to support the monorail. Simply, that Seattle is indeed hamstrung when it comes to mammoth projects. Given that Sound Transit is perpetually stuck in approval/budgeting/impact-study limbo, the only alternative is to seek alternatives! Common sense. The monorail isn't a panacea, and it isn't intended to be at this early stage. It is simply a start in the right direction, which is far more than Sound Transit can offer.

      --
      ----- And all that the Lorax left here in this mess was a small pile of rocks, with one word...UNLESS.
    3. Re:Monorail is a tragedy in Seattle by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      For someone so completely arrogant, your "clue times" are amazingly clueless.

      First off, if grade separation is "good," the ability to build at grade, and to build beneath grade are better -- both things that light rail can do, and monorail cannot.

      Second, precisely because monorail has never been built in the US in a non-theme-park environment, no one can say with any confidence what it will cost to build a line here. It's even worse for the Seattle monorail, because the thing that was voted in is essentially unplanned.

      Third, comparing the Disney World monorail to a city mass transit is about as silly and arbitrary as you can get. Do you honestly believe that Disney has the political difficulties of an urban populus in proposing/building a new mass transit line? Do the fuzzy cartoon theme characters gather in protest at "community meetings" every time a new monorail pylon is built? Please. Disney World is a company, and we live in a democracy. Big difference, moron.

  60. Re:Or, put another way Rational if... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You live in Germany.
    You live in the Netherlands.

  61. Re:Possible interference ... Takes billions by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    to play this game. Politicians snort a million bucks like a crack hound.

  62. Well put by serutan · · Score: 5, Informative

    I live in West Seattle, and my first reaction to this story was to respond like you did. But I didn't have to because you put the facts so well. Way to go. So let me paint a more subjective picture.

    In the 14 years I've lived in West Seattle the traffic has at least tripled. Not just commute traffic -- people do a lot more in their lives than just go to and from work. I'm talking about shopping, going out to eat, etc. within the immediate area. The monorail isn't going to do squat for that. In fact, it will probably bring in more people and make the situation worse. As much as I hate the traffic on the West Seattle bridge, at least it probably discourages some people from moving over here.

    This is an area people don't tend to move out of. It has a large number of people who have lived here since WWII and before, have raised their families here and have mostly taken good care of their homes. Those folks are dying off now, and their houses are being bought by people who either subdivide the lots with two skinny townhouse-like structures or put up 4-story apartments and business buildings, depending on whether there is a view. Property prices (and taxes) have therefore soared in the last 10 years. Our house value has quadrupled, which I suppose would be fine if we were real estate speculators, but we just want to live here. A district of longtime homeowners is turning into a district of renters, which we all know will eventually drive the quality of the area down.

    The City of Seattle bureaucrats see this as "revitalizing" the area. I see it as "devitalizing". What they get is more tax money, from the residents but more importantly from the businesses, which pay both property tax and business tax. What we residents get is more crime, more graffiti (not the cool artsy kind, the dumbass tag kind), more losers walking around with an attitude, and more cars driven by hurried, over-extended people talking on cellphones, drinking lattes and putting on makeup.

    A little rant about Seattle politics...
    Schlach mentioned above that the monorail passed by only 800 votes. Seattle is developing a history of big projects that pass by a narrow margin. The new monorail is the most recent. Seahawks Stadium was another one, but at least it too actually passed. The Mariners baseball stadium was defeated by us mere voters, but the state legislature responded by obligingly writing a law authorizing any county with a million or more residents to issue bonds to build athletic complexes. There's only one such county in the state, guess which one. To avoid future complications they even gave the law a 2-year expiration date. The stadium the county commissioners authorized cost 3 times as much as the one the voters rejected.

    Makes me proud to live in a democracy.

    1. Re:Well put by wytcld · · Score: 3, Interesting
      In the 14 years I've lived in West Seattle the traffic has at least tripled.

      I moved from Seattle 14 years ago among other things because traffic was getting so bad ... to New York, but hey if I'm going to suffer the pains of a major city, may as well have the rewards of one. Folks who don't know Seattle don't realize that rail will succeed there for the exact same reason the current most successful use of it is Portland, OR: folks in that corner of the country are very environmentally correct (especially the loggers who improve the forests by removing the large combustable objects!). Not to mention the retro-techno-wiz factor in monorail - lots of fans of that out there too.

      But what's just plain wrong about the plan is that they're putting the first line not where the population density of transit riders is, but where the rich are (or where the real estate speculators believe more rich can be lured), nearer the water. It will be useless for instance to the U of W with 40,000 mostly-transit-riding students who lean strongly green, and is closer to downtown than Ballard. The line should go there first. "But they're already on transit, why give them more service?" Right, ignore your best customers.

      --
      "with their freedom lost all virtue lose" - Milton
    2. Re:Well put by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      My favorite part of Seattle is looking in my rear view mirror as the buildings disappear over the horizon.

      Big cities are like overloaded porta-potties. It stinks and is full of shit (heads).

    3. Re:Well put by Xerithane · · Score: 1

      Folks who don't know Seattle don't realize that rail will succeed there for the exact same reason the current most successful use of it is Portland, OR: folks in that corner of the country are very environmentally correct (especially the loggers who improve the forests by removing the large combustable objects!). Not to mention the retro-techno-wiz factor in monorail - lots of fans of that out there too.

      Coming from a Portlander... I really hope the Seattle monorail doesn't turn into what the Portland MAX (Light rail) has. In the winter time, through Fareless square (Downtown) it's more of a shelter for bums. In the summer time, it's more of a shelter for bums.

      I don't care about bums, that's fine, but I'm not going to commute on a line that has 15 dirty old men asking me for spare change and when I say no have half of them try to fight me. I used to ride the Max all the time to work, but I got fed up with it. Most people that I work with have also given it up that have to take it through downtown (West side residents, as opposed to east side residents)

      It is definitely not a pleasant experience.

      --
      Dacels Jewelers can't be trusted.
    4. Re:Well put by Wireless+Joe · · Score: 1

      ...Not just commute traffic -- people do a lot more in their lives than just go to and from work. I'm talking about shopping, going out to eat, etc. within the immediate area. The monorail isn't going to do squat for that. In fact, it will probably bring in more people and make the situation worse.

      How are people riding to West Seattle going to make traffic in West Seattle worse? Are they going to strap their cars on top of the monorail and unload them there to drive them around? It might increase walking traffic, if that's what you meant. But I have no problem with drivers inconvenienced by foot traffic.

  63. Re:Ok, I just posted their first ever link to goat by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    No, I think they'll like Japanese fecal matter chick better.

  64. Re:Typical Seattle.... You are from San by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Francisco. A big city with high population density. NO SHIT public transportation works there.

  65. [OT]: Your store by cscx · · Score: 2

    I find it ironic that your anti-MS apparel store runs on IIS with ASP.NET. Whatever's best for the job, I guess.

    1. Re:[OT]: Your store by JessLeah · · Score: 1

      It's just a CafePress store. If you went to the URL, you'd see the redirector. :)

      IIS is most certainly not "best" for the job. I'm just at CafePress's mercy when I use their services.

  66. Japanese Public Transportation by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

    I moved from LA to Tokyo and, in my opinion, a good public transportation system ROCKS! I havent even been in a car in almost a year. Geography aside, if LA (or the entire SoCal area) had something that was 1)safe 2)convenient and 3)reliable, I think it might work. But it'll never happen *sigh*

    1. Re:Japanese Public Transportation by DuBois · · Score: 1

      Well then, you've done the right thing: you moved to Japan to slake your thirst for government transportation systems. The socialist Japanese government is on the verge of bankruptcy and needs your taxes to prop it up. Good luck! (especially since the U.S. Government still taxes you and we who still live in a nominally "free" country get the benefit of your taxes).

      --
      The IPCC has purposely engineered a massive scientific fraud.
    2. Re:Japanese Public Transportation by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      gotta second that account(same experience in the past). If anyone ever HAD to get out of their cars for a bit, they'd realize that occassionally, it's nice to simply have another way to get somewhere that doesn't involve having to drive yourself there.

  67. Re:Yes! Campbell Scott's idea from the movie Singl by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
  68. More Pork by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    5000 people from Boeing will get canned next year and the government decides it can afford to spend an extra 10-20 billion. Yea.

  69. Sydney monorail = bad example by Otto · · Score: 2

    I've been to Sydney and seen the monorail. It only goes in a loop around a relatively small area, which is filled with tourist attraction type stuff. It doesn't seem to be intended for wide city use.

    What I did see getting widespread use in Sydney was the subway system. Takes you most anywhere in town. Very handy, useful, and relatively cheap. Clean too, unlike a lot of other subways I've been in.

    --
    - Give a man a fire and he's warm for a day, but set him on fire and he's warm for the rest of his life.
  70. Re:please stop for the love of the simpsons by Dahamma · · Score: 1

    You "liked the Simpsons better before it was popular and had a large following". What does that give you, about a YEAR?! Ay Caramba, couldn't be much more than that before the t-shirts started.

    The funny thing about the monorail quotes is, IT'S TRUE! The only useful monorail I've been on went between the Luxor and the Mirage.

  71. Re:Ok, pardon my bitterness I take it by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    that you live in a tent, heated by a wood fire and you ride a bicycle or walk to work. No... You are using a computer, running seti, wearing enough plastic to choke a cow.
    War for oil? Dream on you democrat.

  72. Re:Possible interference from oil// resist redmond by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I only use open source but I would never buy a cup or a shirt that says RESIST redmond. I mean what does that mean, mr. rebel without a clue.

  73. Re:Possible interference ... Takes billions by JessLeah · · Score: 1

    Except when you don't.

    Remember the current administration's relationship with the oil industry. Things do trickle down to the local level, at least to some degree.

    All it would take would be for Bush to send a high-level diplomat to Seattle to convince them to stop the whole thing. It probably wouldn't take much doing either.

  74. It's about time by MalleusEBHC · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Even though this bond won't be voted on until Nov 2004 in California, it's about time we work on some decent public transit in this state. Outside of BART and maybe Caltrain, public transportation is horrible out here. Los Angeles is the second biggest city in the country, and it is quite possibly the worst public transit system (or lack thereof) I have ever seen for a big city.

    New York has their subway, Boston has the T, and Chicago has the L. I haven't tried Chicago, but in Boston and New York their systems work great. You don't need a car because you can hop on a train and get pretty much anywhere you need to go with no more than a couple blocks of walking.

    But unlike these cities, out here we have hardly anything at best. BART is great to get around in the East Bay and to get you to San Francisco, but once you are in the city you are walking pretty much anywhere. Caltrains is a decent option for people in the south bay who want to go to the city, but it is pretty slow and only goes to 4th street, once again leaving you a hefty walk if you are going anywhere other than Pac Bell Park.

    However, as bad as it is up north, down south it is an utter joke. The pathetic excuse for a subway system in Los Angeles serves so little of the city that it's practically useless. Other than that, you have an unreliable bus system that couldn't follow a time schedule to save someone's life. I don't know about anything in San Diego, but as far as I know they don't have anything special.

    While it won't be put into place for a long time even if the bond gets passed, I'm hoping this is a step in the right direction. Even though this system is state-wide rather than city-wide, I have a feeling that if we can get a really successful model to follow, cities will jump on the bandwagon and start making changes for the better.

    1. Re:It's about time by MtViewGuy · · Score: 2

      At least here in the San Francisco Bay Area we have something resembling decent public transportation, though of course some systems are in desperate need of upgrading (like MUNI in San Francisco).

      I think one of the big mistakes the Santa Clara VTA did when they built the light rail system was not choosing their two initial lines of going up El Camino Real to Palo Alto and west on San Carlos Street/Stevens Creek Boulevard from San Jose; they could have captured a massive number of riders just on these two lines. Hopefully, when the economy improves we will eventually see LRT lines built along these corridors.

    2. Re:It's about time by niall2 · · Score: 1

      Two words that make Public Transportation work...population density. Boston, New York, Chicago, Washington DC, and most European cities all have dence population cores. People are willing to walk a little to get to a subway stop or bus stop. They are even willing to wait 5 to 10 minutes to get on the thing. More than that and they lose interest.

      In a dence population area, one subway/bus stop (which is an expensive thing to build) can serve many people. Hence you have a short walk and a short wait (more demand = more frequent service).

      Out here in most of the west (appart from the centers of Seatle and San Francisco) we have urban sprawl. There are only two solutions for public transportation: very infrequent service or large distances between stops. Neither work, as either you have to plan your day around catching the bus, or you have to drive to the bus stop. And face it, if you have a car in either situation, your going to use it. And this doesn't even begin to address the problems of trying to go from point a to point b which are served by different infrequent services, leading to more waiting for a different bus.

      Don't get me wrong. I love public transportation. I'd use it in a heart beat if it worked for me. But I live in a low population density town in Colorado that, if the population growth got to big, I'd probably move. Sort of a catch-22 for many of us here in the west.

      --
      Today is a gift. Save the receipt.
    3. Re:It's about time by zericm · · Score: 2

      But unlike these cities, out here we have hardly anything at best. BART is great to get around in the East Bay and to get you to San Francisco, but once you are in the city you are walking pretty much anywhere. Caltrains is a decent option for people in the south bay who want to go to the city, but it is pretty slow and only goes to 4th street, once again leaving you a hefty walk if you are going anywhere other than Pac Bell Park.

      As a long time residnet of San Francisco (24 years) I want to point out that The City has pretty good public transportation. While there have been problems, the system moves over 700,000 people a day within the confines of San Francisco, a city with a little over 720,000 residents. According to Muni, over 90% of the population lives within two blocks of a bus or lightrail/subway line. Muni works well enough that I don't own a car after 35 years on this earth.

      As someone noted in another reply, density is the key. San Francisco, with a little over 700,000 people in just 49 square miles has one of the highest population desnsities in the world.

      As for the rest of the bay area, yeah mass transit pretty much sucks. But that is more related to the fact that those areas have grown more like traditional American suburbs, with low population densistiy and centered around the car as the main mode of transportation.

      thx,
      eric

      --
      The welfare of the people has always been the alibi of tyrants. - Albert Camus
    4. Re:It's about time by Goldsmith · · Score: 1

      We've been desperate in San Diego for something... ANYTHING, for a long, long time. We have a "trolly" that has two stops.

      You might have heard of FastTrak, where you pay to use the carpool lanes. No one was using the carpool lanes on I-15 so we started selling a limited number of passes for it to fund public transit. The first idea was for a train that would run along the same route... but the usual complaints of room, cost and "needing more study" came up and the money ended up paying for busses.

      That's the best we've got.

  75. Re:Possible interference from oil and/or auto firm by WaKall · · Score: 1

    That's when Paul Allen decides he really wants a monorail and waves even more under their nose. I mean, cmon, wouldn't you want to have a monorail go right by your office?

    (Paul Allen is a microsoft exec who owns a part of Seahawks Stadium, a big office complex across the street where I work, Experience Music Project in Seattle Center, and Allen Island out by the San Juans. In other words, a lot of big public landmarks)

  76. fa! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Interesting

    Good old left coast. So I take it you'd like a multimillion dollar boondoggle to go along with union control of pacific coast shipping, a corrupt governor, and a loony-left house minority leader? The west coast is going to become a drag on the progress of the rest of country. "Drag?" Yes. Pun intended.

  77. Re:Possible interference from oil// resist redmond by JessLeah · · Score: 1

    That's Ms. rebel, thanks.

    And the shirt would be a bit more explicit if these guys, whose services I use, didn't explicitly ban the mention of any copyrighted names, or photos of any famous people, etc. etc. etc.

    I really wanted to put this picture on a shirt.. but that would have broken CafePress's rules on several counts.

    BTW: It's a fucking shirt. I could easily fill ten or twenty pages with why you should "resist Redmond", but that wouldn't be too effective on a shirt. Can you picture it: "Hey! Is your shirt printed in microfilm!? I can't read it!"

    P.S. Nice troll.
    P.P.S. Nice to see SlashDotters coming to defense of Microsoft again.
    P.P.P.S. Nice to see them lacking the nerve to do it as anyone but 'Anonymous Coward'. :)

  78. Definition of "resist" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    I would never buy a cup or a shirt that says RESIST redmond. I mean what does that mean

    HTH. HAND.

  79. A better alternative by Jarl · · Score: 1

    I find this walkthrough extremely thought-provoking. A lot of interesting reading elsewhere on their site too.

  80. The Church of Monorail. by Tim · · Score: 2

    "The problem with LTR is that it is also in traffic, has crashes, and can not be automated. Monorail can be automated, never crashes, and literally rides above it all"

    *sigh*

    ...and the problem with monorail is that you get only a handful of places to board and exit (vs. every stop for light rail), when monorail breaks down, people have to get down from 30 feet above the ground somehow, it's an inescapable blight on the landscape (remember: once an LTR train has gone by, you don't see it anymore), and because there are exactly four monorail manufacturers, you're basically locked into whatever company built the line for all future maintenance costs.

    By the by...how many times a year do light rail trains really get into accidents? (answer: not many). Oh...and how big a problem is the light rail/traffic jam problem? (answer: in a well-designed system, not that big a problem).

    I swear, Monorail should just be declared a religion in this country. At least that way the zealots can get tax breaks....

    --
    Let's try not to let fact interfere with our speculation here, OK?
    1. Re:The Church of Monorail. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      By the by...how many times a year do light rail trains really get into accidents? (answer: not many). Oh...and how big a problem is the light rail/traffic jam problem? (answer: in a well-designed system, not that big a problem).

      Suspecting and are, are 2 very different things.
      Each LTR train averages 1 fatality each year. That is, each train system.
      As to the traffic jams? well here in Denver, each LTR rail is stopped for several hours each month generally by accidents occuring with other cars on the track (i.e. not the train itself). And that is here at denver.

  81. Re:Bus lanes by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    have special bus lanes so that buses can keep schedules and provide an efficent service particularly in peak hour. For certain situations you can also develop a system of special bus traffic lights to give buses an advantage over the normal traffic

  82. London trains by pommiekiwifruit · · Score: 2
    Hmm, it may be better here than in the US, but that's not saying much. Compared to Germany, France or Japan we suck!

    Their site mentions that in Japan the average deviation from schedule is 24 seconds. Last night at 1am I saw a train that was over an hour late! (I think it came from Scotland). We have highly advanced display systems just to tell you how late each train or bus is :-). Mind you, the displays at local bus-stops giving estimates of which busses will arrive and when aren't 100% accurate.

    The price of a daily travel card has gone up from £1.30 in 1990 to £5.00 now, which must be well above inflation (monthlies are better value though). Note that in theory you cannot buy a ticket on trains now (especially since all the ticket barriers went up).

    1. Re:London trains by Xerithane · · Score: 2

      Their site mentions that in Japan the average deviation from schedule is 24 seconds. Last night at 1am I saw a train that was over an hour late! (I think it came from Scotland). We have highly advanced display systems just to tell you how late each train or bus is :-). Mind you, the displays at local bus-stops giving estimates of which busses will arrive and when aren't 100% accurate.

      That's complete bunk about Japan. I know from my first hand experience it's an average of 26 seconds. Don't trust JRL, they're numbers aren't right.

      --
      Dacels Jewelers can't be trusted.
  83. bad implementation? by Booleus · · Score: 1

    I am very suprised a city the size of seattle has taken that long to get proper rapid transit. Look to your north to vancouver and have a look at a system that has been in place since 1986. it is about time for seattle. just curious, why wouldnt you use a higher speed system than a monorail (maybe something similar to the skytrain in vancouver?) better than nothing though

    1. Re:bad implementation? by mikewas · · Score: 4, Interesting
      Vancouver didn't get the surpises thrown at them that Seattle did.

      IIRC from the time I lived near Seattle (in the 80s):

      There has been a big change in people's lifestyles in the Seattle area. At one time there was only one big employer -- Boeing -- who had major facilities to the north and to the south of the city. If somebody's Boeing job changed to another location they moved to be near work. An economic downturn & a slump in the housing market made it difficult to sell your home at a reasonable price, so people commutted through the city instead of moving closer to work. People who worked in the city tended to live there.

      The change was rapid. Miles travelled throug the city soared dramatically, way out of proportion to the poulation increase. If I remember correctly, a period of 15% population growth saw traffic through the city more than double. I think the local government was caught offguard, had to take action rapidly, so added highways and an excellent bus system.

      This was followed by an influx of computer companies -- like Microsoft. This brought a large population increase, primarily from the high tech areas of Silicon Valley. these folks had a different attitude about driving & building. They built homes in areas that were once thought unbuildable -- cliffs & bluffs -- changing the traffic patterns through the city yet again, and increasing the miles driven through the city all out of proportion to the population increases.

      Again, a rapid and unanticipated increase in population and a cultural change in the population that increased use of cars. Bus service was expanded, more HOV lanes ...

      --

      "Glory is fleeting, but obscurity is forever." --Napoleon Bonaparte
  84. Re:Ok, pardon my bitterness I take it by Alan+Partridge · · Score: 1

    wise up fuck face

    a war for oil is EXACTLY what it is, and it's GONNA happen whether Saddam complies with the UN or not. Why the fuck do you think Bitiain is supporting it? BP perhaps?

    --
    That was classic intercourse!
  85. Re:please stop for the love of the simpsons by Library+Spoff · · Score: 0

    >>oh shit man you are killing the simpsons. seriously, i liked the simpsons better before it was popular and had a large following.

    replace simpsons with linux/House Music/tattoos/Piercings/whatever...

    yes yes, you are *so* cool...

    you were into everything first and we are all lamers... congrats.

    --
    Acid House saves Souls
  86. Thanks! by wtom · · Score: 1

    I sent in a submission yesterday to slashdot about how to purposefully get on spam lists for the purpose of testing spamassassin - I will allow myself to be deluded into thinking I am responsible for this article.

    --

    Styrofoam IS biodegradable, you're just impatient!
  87. Mono = One, Rail = Rail by Cyno01 · · Score: 2

    This concludes our six week course.

    --
    "Sic Semper Tyrannosaurus Rex."
  88. Amtrak by wowbagger · · Score: 3, Interesting
    The difference between Amtrak in the US and the rail systems in Europe and the UK is this:

    In Europe, the primary goal of the rail system is moving people. In the US, the primary goal is moving freight.

    Amtrak does not own the railbeds - the various freight companies (like Burlington Northern/Santa Fe) do. This has several negative effects on Amtrak:

    1. Freight trains get priority over passenger lines. So if both a trainload of shipping containers and an Amtrak train need the same section of rail, guess who gets to set in a siding.
    2. Late trains wait for on-time trains. As a result, if you are late, you just get later as you keep waiting on the sidings. This is not so much a problem with freight, but kills passenger service.
    3. Freight trains don't NEED to run 150MPH plus. 70 MPH is fine. As a result, the freight companies have no motivation to upgrade the rail beds. I've ridden the Southwest Chief - and over some of the rail lines you'd better be sitting down, as you will be thrown around otherwise.


    In addition, the first time a high-speed train Darwin'ed a moron trying to beat it across the tracks, and derailed and killed a bunch of passengers, Amtrak would be sued into obilivion. You would need to have over/underpasses at every road intersection, as well as fences along the rail to prevent stupid people from walking along the rails ("Look! I am gunna put a penny on the tracks. This will be co-" <Brraaaak! Ding Ding Ding... >)

    Now, were the US to invest enough money to build a seperate, passenger only rail system, then it MIGHT become reasonable to take the train - a train that averaged 150 MPH would be able to make the run from Kansas to California in 12 hours, rather than 26. Given the delays involved in flying, this becomes competitive, especially if they set up the Autotrain cars so that I can have my car when I get where I am going. It would still be faster to fly from New York to LA, but from the middle of the US out it would become reasonable to take the train, unless you are on a high-priority business trip.

    Now, how to achive this spending of money without it becoming Pure Pork? If I had a certain answer I wouldn't be typing on Slashdot, but what I would recommend is a modification of what worked in the past: a Rural Rail act, similar to the Rural Electrification Act of yore. Make Amtrak a private company, have the government loan them the money to build/improve the rails, and make them pay it back. If they fail to pay it back, forclose on the lines.

    If you look at the history of the REA, it made the government far more than it cost - most of the REA loan recipents paid their loans off in full. In addition, the improvement in the infrastructure of the country ALSO paid for the system.

    I'd love to see the rails improve - the train is MUCH nicer for a 6'4" person like me than a plane, seeing the scenary along the way is great, having a 110VAC outlet in your sleeper car is great for mobile hacking, and trains can stop more places than a plane can. But until it either costs less than a plane or takes about the same time as a plane, it is a luxury, not a viable competitor.

    (however, I do recommend taking either the Southwest Chief or the California Zypher at least once - get a sleeper car, and treat the trip as the vacation.)
    1. Re:Amtrak by Wyatt+Earp · · Score: 1

      Passenger rail in the US died because for two events.

      1. In spring and summer of 1941, George Patton was charged with moving a Armored Division from Georgia to California by road, simulating a response to an invasion and overland movement by road. It took about six weeks to move the unit. The Army General Staff knew that something would have to be done with the surface road system in the US>

      2. In the 1950s, President Eisenhower, who had witnessed the German road system first hand, started the ball rolling on development of the US Interstate Highway system to facilitate rapid redeployment of men and material.

      In the US freight trains should get first priority, most of the surface cargo transported in the US is transported by rail. Freight trains don't need to go 150, but they do travel at speeds up to 95 MPH.

      Rural rail in the US won't work like you propose. How small of towns are going to get stations? How is it going to work? You going to have a train between Mobridge SD and Bismarck ND run 6 times a day?

      "If you look at the history of the REA, it made the government far more than it cost - most of the REA loan recipents paid their loans off in full. In addition, the improvement in the infrastructure of the country ALSO paid for the system."

      The REA only made a profit because in the 1950s, 60s, 70s, 80s and early 90s the United States Air Force had missile bases in a number of rural states (ND, SD, WY, MT, MO, etc) which paid for massive amounts of electricity.

      Now in those previously AF areas, the power companies are struggling since there are only missile bases in ND and WY now.

    2. Re:Amtrak by invenustus · · Score: 2

      Very well said. Most people agree passenger rail is a good thing, but too many rail advocates fall into unrealistic wishes and the kind of conspiracy theorizing you can read elsewhere on this thread.

      One other reason you can't just apply European-style passenger rail to the United States is geography. Europe is small and densely populated, so at any given moment, a lot of people are willing pay to get from City A to City B. The trip from Paris to Brussels is not at all comparable to the trip from Chicago to Los Angeles.

      The northeastern United States IS small and densely populated like Europe, and guess what? Amtrak makes its only profits there. I suspect that a properly-run railroad could make even more. There are always people who need to travel fast between Boston, Connecticut, New York, New Jersey, Philadelphia, Wilmington, Baltimore, and DC.

      I suspect that if all the railroads in rural areas like where I am - the Upper Connecticut Valley - were left to the market, freight rail would become more efficient, attracting more customers away from truck shipping. Getting those trucks off the roads would mean less pollution and safer driving for us lowly car operators. (There's nothing like being in the left lane with an 18-wheeler to your right, and seeing his left turn signal come on.)

      --
      grep -ri 'should work' /usr/src/linux | wc -l
  89. east coast west coast by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    maybe a little bicoastal competition will finally make us on the east coast serious about developing a high speed rail line...i wouldn't take the dc-nyc amtrak line if they paid me...

  90. DC-NY-Boston Buses by johnjay · · Score: 1

    Better than Peter Pan/Greyhound are the Chinatown buses that run from Chinatown Boston to Chinatown NY (and on to DC, but I don't know where). They cost about $40 round trip compared to the PP/G $80, and they leave on the half-hour instead of the hour. There's no difference in time or comfort of ride (the Chinatown buses don't have VCRs to play horrid old movies, so that's a plus). As far as safety, I have no idea; there are good reasons to fear both kinds of carriers. I did see a Chinatown bus broken down on the side of the road once while going to Boston on another Chinatown bus.

    There are at least three different services: Fung-Wa and Sunshine are two, I can't remember the name of the third. There are posters plastered all of Chinatown advertising them, you can find the bus adverts right next to the ones hawking calling cards.

    Oh, the other fun thing with the Chinatown buses is buying the tickets. For Fung-Wa, you buy from a little hole in the wall next to a temple (NY) or go into a certain coffee shop/bakery and talk to a woman permanently set up at one of the tables (Bos).

    1. Re:DC-NY-Boston Buses by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      ChinaTown DC bus goes to .... ChinaTown :)

      It is a good cheap way to go to NYC, I didn't realize it went on to Bean Town too.

    2. Re:DC-NY-Boston Buses by johnjay · · Score: 1

      That would make sense, wouldn't it? Thanks for the info.

  91. i wonder where they get the money for this? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    take away the tax revenue that Microsoft pumps into the local area government and i seriously doubt this would be in the budget. of course, people who celebrate the demise of Microsoft don't ever see that side of things.

  92. Fast Rail in California is a REALLY BAD THING by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ten BILLION dollars to build a train??

    ??

    Have you guys EVER been sane out there?

    Why would I EVER take the train from LA to Sactown? I could drive 15 min to LAX and hop a plane...or I could drive 1 hr to downtown LA, and hop a train that takes longer than the plane.

    California+Public Transit DOES NOT work! LA bus sucks, BART sucks, LA subway sucks, Amtrak sucks, etc etc. Unless you can compress the state into 1/10th the land area, it never will!

    1. Re:Fast Rail in California is a REALLY BAD THING by royalblue_tom · · Score: 1

      Read the CA HST literature - it actually requires $25B. They've past a bill to provide $10B of it.

      The answer is that these days you can't just "hop on a plane". You wait, for at least an hour, while they determine whether any of the passengers are terrorists, and whether any of the luggage is a bomb. And you've got to get to the airport. And back from the airport on the other side.

      As long as the terminals are in resonable locations (compare Union Station and LAX for example) it makes more sense to use a HST than a plane.

    2. Re:Fast Rail in California is a REALLY BAD THING by stefanlasiewski · · Score: 2

      ten BILLION dollars to build a train??

      And in your mind, I suppose you think the roads are free because you rarely see the direct costs.

      Actually it's more like 20 billion, and it's spread over a 10 year period. In contrast, the new San Francisco Bay Bridge will cost $5 billion for 10 years, and the Interchange (MacArthor Maze) cost $2 billion. That's 20 miles of very expensive road.

      Have you guys EVER been sane out there?

      Listen, we prefer to think outside of the box. America is addicted to it's road system and oil economy, and is almost incapable of seeing anything different. We need progress, not the same old roads.

      Why would I EVER take the train from LA to Sactown?

      There are tens-of-millions of people who drive between LA and Sacramento every year. Why don't you ask them. Sacramento, Fresno, & Bakersfield will each have over a million people by 2020. We need to plan for those transit needs NOW, not after-the-fact.

      I could drive 15 min to LAX and hop a plane...or I could drive 1 hr to downtown LA, and hop a train that takes longer than the plane.

      You are hallucinating. There is no 'hop'. To drive to LA, there's the hour driving in traffic, the 1-2 hours getting a ticket and going through security, the average delay on the SFO & LAX runway is 20 minutes, the flight is 1.5 hours, you spend an average of 20 minute taxi-ing on the LAX runway, takes 30 minutes to get your luggage, and then you need to find a taxi or rent a car.

      It's not a 'hop' by any means.

      --
      "Can of worms? The can is open... the worms are everywhere."
  93. Move it out your wallet into a bureacrat's resume by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I am so glad to hear that we have yet another city government providing a resume padding taxpayer funded for "Entrepreneurial Bureacrats".

    I wonder how long it will take for the lawyers, lobbyists, mayor, and bureacrats to look for a better paying city without a 'needed' rail line.

  94. From the MCATs by Codex+The+Sloth · · Score: 2

    Make sure hat the conductors have passed the MCATS (Monorail Conductors Aptitude Test):

    Q: True or false? You can get mono from riding the monorail.

    And make sure the trains aren't from the 1969 Worlds Fair...

    --
    I am not a number! I am a man! And don't you ... oh wait, I'm #93427. Ha ha! In your face #93428!
    1. Re:From the MCATs by blanalex · · Score: 1

      It was the 1967 Worlds Fair, in Montreal, and it did had a monorail around the island where the fair was built.

      --
      #DEFINE QUESTION (2b)||(!2b) -- William Shakespeare
  95. Stupid by twfry · · Score: 1
    I lived in Seattle for the past two years but moved a little while ago. They had a plan for a real subway system from UW, to downtown, through west seattle and south to the airport.


    This would have helped with traffic. The monorail extention they are doing won't help nearly as much and will look like shite. Oh well.

    1. Re:Stupid by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Actually, the plan you're talking about, Sound Transit's LINK, is a light rail system, not a "real subway" in the heavy rail, NYC/London/etc. sense.

      Furthermore, that plan would never have gone to West Seattle, and money isn't there now to get it even to UW. And it will stop more than 2 miles from the airport.

      Try to get your facts straight, especially given you don't even live here any more.

  96. Rail is usually a bad idea by egarland · · Score: 1
    I like riding in trains but trains usually don't make economic sense.

    From an IEEE Spectrum article:

    Hoping to reduce traffic congestion and air pollution, US urban areas from Los Angeles to Sioux City (Iowa) are rushing to build new surface light rail systems. But despite claims to the contrary, light rail does not reduce traffic congestion, and is a highly expensive strategy..

    US federal research indicates that quality bus systems are one-fifth the cost per passenger mile of light rail per passenger mile, can accommodate the volumes and operate as fast.

    ...

    Advocates also claim that light rail is less costly than new highways, This is alleged by comparing the cost of a light rail line per mile to that of a six or eight lane freeway. This is an invalid, because the freeway carries such an enormously greater number of people. An eight lane freeway carries, on average, 16 times the volume of a new light rail line. In fact, total costs, public and private, per passenger mile of light rail averages seven times that of new urban freeways.


    The rest can be found here:
    http://www.publicpurpose.com/ut-ieee.htm

    If the same ammount of money was spent on building new highways instead of new rail systems the results could carry 16 times as many people and really help to solve traffic congestion problems. Instead people throw money down the black hole that is trains. Highways are just simply more efficient.

    To illustrate why go find a train track and look at it. Odds are, there isn't a train in sight. Now go find a highway...
    --
    set softtabstop=4 shiftwidth=4 expandtab nocp worlddomination
  97. Re:Feasibility? by Nexus7 · · Score: 1

    How about the feasibility of the Seattle monorail? In California you're at least talking about rail, and rail transportation's been around forever. Even urban rail has been there for many (100+?) years since the London Underground. But when you consider Seattle you have the problem that monorails aren't terribly popular or tried-and-tested for mass transportation, to add to every other argument you can have against mass or rail transit. I guess a monorail probably looks less cluttered than 2 steel rails, but I can't think how it can be safer, faster, more reliable, or cheaper than steel rail. For example, once you're done laying track, you can buy somewhat standard diesel multiple units from Siemens or Bombardier who have been making them for decades; and start making revenue. OTOH, who makes monorail cars for off the shelf purchase? Do we have mature monorail track switching? Do we have experience maintaining them under heavy loads? Can we get experienced manpower from iwthin the country? I'm sure these issues have been debated in Seattle, but has anyone heard any answers?

  98. Sounds like more of a Shelbyvile idea to me by visionsofmcskill · · Score: 1

    where are the natural gas companies that put mass transportation on the west coast to death 50 years ago?

    well BART got through eventualy, so i suppose theyve realized not everyone is goiing to drive a gas burning car in a couple decades, Or is the market for internal combustion engines in the west finaly saturated?

    --
    --Idiots, Every single one of YOU, A flaming mass of conglomerated morons, hey wait a second, isnt that how RAID works?
  99. Monorails are yesterday's technology by antarctican · · Score: 1

    Monorails will never be an efficient means of mass transit. The fact that the infustructure is so intrusive, the fact that "switches" are overly complicated and involve moving large slabs of concrete. Monorails belong in theme parks.

    If Seattle wanted a real transit system they'd look at light rail, which can be elevated if so desired.

    Using a rail system just opens up so many more doors, besides being a lot cheaper to build.

    First Las Vegas, now Seattle, sigh, will these snake oil salesmen never go away?

    1. Re:Monorails are yesterday's technology by bscottid · · Score: 1

      Monorail is perfect for Seattle primarily because we have a severe shortage of right-of-way. The hills and water forces all travel into a few narrow corridors, and the cost of acquiring new space in those corridors is incredibly expensive and politically contentious.

      However, monorail just needs a 3 foot square space for a column every 120 feet. It fits in the parking strips of our narrow Seattle arterials. Thus, it adds huge new capacity without buying land, tearing down homes, or taking away lanes from cars.

      By they way, we also have a light rail project in the Seattle area. However, it's years behind schedule and at $200 million per mile is twice as expensive as the monorail.

    2. Re:Monorails are yesterday's technology by Dolemite_the_Wiz · · Score: 1

      Also, geologically speaking, Light Rail can't be used due to the makeup of the proposed rail line.

      --
      Save the World! Use a Quote!
    3. Re:Monorails are yesterday's technology by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Someone mod this parent up its exactly correct. Monorail does nothing a light rail cant do and light rail does it better with more flexibility.

  100. Word! by TamMan2000 · · Score: 2

    I live right on (.1 mi from door to trail) an old railroad track->bike trail in Connecticut, it is wonderful (I recently did my first marathon, almost all of my training was on this trail). If they had a shower anywhere within 2 miles of where I work, I would bike to work whenever there is no snow.

    The sad part is, I know lots of people in this situation (would bike to work, but...), most of them who don't work with me, and do have access to a shower, are terrified (rightly so) of the damn drivers. I think it would help most if they built small gravel or asphalt trails that mirrored all major commuter corridors, throughout the country, and more bike lanes on secondary roads. This would not only get people off the roads, but it would reduce heart disease and many other nasty things associated with being fat and lazy.

    Lets face it, most people are so stubborn that they will not schedule their commute so that they can use mass transit that leaves the station less frequently than once every 5 minutes. The only way to get people off the roads is to provide easier non-mass-transit ways to get around.

    --
    "I'll have a Guinness, no wait, make that a Coors Light" -Grad student I work with, who shall remain anonymous...
  101. Re:Move it out your wallet into a bureacrat's resu by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    you won't find a better paying city, at least until this one's bankrupt.

  102. ...Simpons references... by whoisjoe · · Score: 1

    Arrrrr...ya call that an anchor?!

  103. Re:Feasibility? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Relax.

    First of all, it will never get built. Seattle's the town that just burned through 2 billion dollars on a more realistic light rail system, without even getting off the planning board. Actually, without even deciding where they want to put it.

    Secondly, there wouln't be any traffic. It goes from the antique shoppe district (not very big) to the beach (not very big.) PS. Seattle isn't much of a beach town. The beach consists of a couple coffee shops and a path for rollerbladers that only gets used about 30 days per year (coincidentally the same number of days the sun is shining.) The fat cat wanna-be-hippies-because-they-missed-out-when-they -were-young who supported the monorail live their sedentary indoor lives primary in *surprise* the antique shop district or the fashionably quaint (50's & 60's architecture) neighborhoods around Seattle's only beach.

    Thirdly, there won't be any switching. It's going to be like your typical airport monorail. Soft tones reminding you that it is slowing down for the 3 stops on the way, and then put it in reverse and go to the other end of one line. Of course, I'm into speculative territory here, they haven't really thought about where it's actually going to stop, or researched other monorails enough to know about that reverse trick everyone learns at disneyworld or (insert hub airport abbr. here)

  104. The Church of LTRs by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ..and the problem with monorail is that you get only a handful of places to board and exit (vs. every stop for light rail),

    When was the last time that you got the LTR to stop in the middle of a road and let you off? Here in denver it only happens at appointed stops. Basically one / 2 miles

    when monorail breaks down, people have to get down from 30 feet above the ground somehow

    that is somewhat true. You can also use another monorail to attach to one end of it and offload them.if it is designed that way. Also some ofthe monorail have a catwalk between the rails, but I would agree that it i ugly

    , it's an inescapable blight on the landscape (remember: once an LTR train has gone by, you don't see it anymore),


    Since when have roads become pleasant to look at? I will take the grace of monorail any day over roads.

    and because there are exactly four monorail manufacturers, you're basically locked into whatever company built the line for all future maintenance costs.
    Interesting argument for monorail. In the LTR industry, each car is different design and differnt hook-up. You can not mix and match.

    Alweg opened their design long ago. Even though the company has since departed, Seattle has had not problem getting Cheap parts. With the LTR world, your parts get expensive as time goes on due to proprietary systems.
    I supect that Seattle will be bright enough to have an open system.

  105. Re:Feasibility? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    yeah, because 3D space is alot more crowded than 2D.

  106. Re:It's about time (really! It IS about *time*.) by DuBois · · Score: 3, Interesting
    ...public transportation is horrible out here.

    Well yes. That's because the word "public" has been a misnomer for "government" for most of the disastrous 20th century, and now remains a misnomer in the 21st. Government transportation systems will always be a mistake, and here are the reasons why:

    1. Government is always about 10 years behind the curve. If governments decide to build highways, they build them with little or no buffer for traffic growth. If the decide to use a 19th century technology like rail (and monorail), they forget to tell people that the system-wide average speed is 14mph. People ride them once or twice for the novelty, but then decide that the waste of time isn't worth it and the trains run riderless.

    2. Government transportation systems are coercively funded, meaning that politicians and bureaucrats, not the needs of the transported "public", decide where projects are built, how much coerced money is used to build them, and who gets the money for construction. Because government systems always require competitive bidding, awarding the "lowest price" bidder with the business, construction starts about a year lather than it otherwise would, and takes forever because the lowest price bidder is also usually the lowest quality. The resulting low quality system breaks down frequently (potholes, anybody?) and requires huge amounts of coerced funding to make it merely usable. A free market owner of a transportation system would take into account the TCO (Total Cost of Ownership) of the system. Government bureaucrats have never even heard of TCO.

    3. Public Utility Commisions consistently reject free market solutions to transportation problems like jitneys, toll roads (it's illegal to toll a federal Interstate highway), profit-making vanpools, and the billions of other ways to profit from transportation that would spring up if the monopoly-protecting fascism of the PUCs was removed.

    It's about time we got government out of the transportation business. Look at how the Internet took off when the ARPA and DARPA controls were removed and the free market took over. The same would happen if government transportation controls were removed.

    --
    The IPCC has purposely engineered a massive scientific fraud.
  107. Do you mean Gov. Gray-Out Davis? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The People's Rupblic of California never suprises anymore. Even more idiotic socialist projects to steal tax dollars for.

    Flame away poor California commi-pinkos!!

  108. The article is wrong: Claifornia high speed rail by JoeBuck · · Score: 3, Informative

    As anyone can see by following the link, California does not yet have funding for the bullet train system. What's been approved is to put a bond measure on the Nov. 2004 ballot.

  109. Forward? by bembleton · · Score: 1

    Are we sure it's going forward? I mean, the back end looks exactly the same as the front, so maybe it's going backwards. Perhaps if the monorail was going backwards fast enough, I could actually get to work before I woke up!

  110. High Speed Rail==Woo Hoo, Monorail == Booooo! by tomdarch · · Score: 3, Interesting
    High speed rail is a great thing, yes, even in the US! I'm in Chicago (live+work in the city!) so I follow Midwest High Speed Rail. For those who claim that we don't have the population density for rail, note that Chicago to Detroit has higher pop density along the corridor than Paris to Lille (the main trunk of the TGV system). At about 200mph I could get from downtown Chicago to downtown St. Louis faster than by plane (shlep to the airport, wait, fly breifly, wait, shlep back from the airport, etc.)

    Seattle monorail, on the other hand, doesn't go from anywhere to anywhere. It's cute, but, as I understand the proposed alignment, it doesn't really serve anyone's needs! It's just going to be a living monorail joke. This doesn't just suck for the people of Seattle - it will be used by morons to argue against investment in public transit in general and against innovative transit technology in specific. I was involved in the development of a prototype Personal Rapid Transit system that would have well served the needs of more dense inner-ring suburbs, but the political will wasn't there from the state government to fund construction. When Seatle builds the extension and there are very few riders, it will be used to bash all sorts of actually good systems.

    1. Re:High Speed Rail==Woo Hoo, Monorail == Booooo! by ainsoph · · Score: 2



      Where did you get your Seattle info?

    2. Re:High Speed Rail==Woo Hoo, Monorail == Booooo! by &y · · Score: 1
      The Seattle monorail will go from everywhere to everywhere, at least after it gets off the ground (so to speak). The initial Green Line "only" servers Ballard, Magnolia, Queen Anne, Belltown, Downtown, SODO, West Seattle, which is quite a big chunk of Seattle neighborhoods. You have to start somewhere, and that's a damn good start. It won't help me, I live on Capitol Hill, but as long as work continues, we will eventually have a city-wide rapid transit solution (which we are way overdue for, as the vast majority of Seattlites will tell you).

      Yeah, it doesn't serve the suburbs or the airport, but it's designed to ease congestion in-city. Even light rail won't get to SeaTac.

      The Stranger (Seattle's alternative weekly) has had great (albeit slightly manic) monorail coverage.

    3. Re:High Speed Rail==Woo Hoo, Monorail == Booooo! by Ian+Bicking · · Score: 2
      I was involved in the development of a prototype Personal Rapid Transit system that would have well served the needs of more dense inner-ring suburbs, but the political will wasn't there from the state government to fund construction.
      Were you involved in the Taxi 2000 O'Hare project? I've read vague things about it, but it was never clear what happened to it. It sounded like the Taxi 2000 people had a different vision from the Chicago engineers, and then there's always funding issues to make things difficult...

      In good news Taxi 2000 has just gotten the first round of funding to make a very short test track. Hopefully this won't be a false start like other attempts, as the project is funded without compromising the core ideas.

  111. Incorrect! by ranchdudes · · Score: 1
    As speed decreases to zero, the capacity of any lane (how many cars on any stretch of a lane) increases to the max (less than infinity), with cars stacked one after the other with no space between them. Of course, they are not going anywhere. The flow of cars with a 2 second distance between them depends on the speed because cars are larger than points.


    More importantly, as highway speed decreases towards ~35mph , people react by stepping on the brake which interferes with the flow of traffic that would otherwise occur with the 2 second rule.


    rd

    1. Re:Incorrect! by patmoore · · Score: 1

      Sorry - try again. Freeway capacity is not measured by how many cars are in a section of road. That is called a parking lot's capacity. (Although most freeways seem to resemble a parking lot more than a road.) The way you measure freeway capacity is how many vehicles pass a certain point for a certain amount of time. (1950s method) or more correctly how many *people* pass that point. This is why carpool lanes can be 'empty' but still handle more load than a regular lane of traffic.

  112. Re:Ok, pardon my bitterness I take it by captaincucumber · · Score: 1

    It's called a bluff. Ever played poker?

    It's the only way to get Saddam to do what we need him to do. For the same reason that "mutually assured destruction" never actually led to mutual destruction, our hammering on the drums of war, will not lead to actual war with Iraq. The only way to get him to do what we tell him to is if we are 100% willing to go to war if he does not. Therefore he will do what we tell him to and we will not go to war.

    The thing about you west coast liberals (am I inaccurate in this assumption?) is that you have this strange crazy unrealistic view of the world. you say things like "the president is an oil baron." Think about things a bit, my friend, the world is not all black and white, good guys and bad guys, and republicans aren't all self-righteous right-wingers who have sold their souls to big oil and big business.

  113. Re:London passenger trains vs American freight by Yet+Another+Smith · · Score: 2

    I've traveled by train in London, Switzerland, Central Europe (Hungary, Slovakia, Poland), France (Eurostar via the Chunnel), Japan, and the US.

    Japan's rail network is pretty damned excellent. Same with Switzerland (and Switzerland's pretty cheap, too, for such an expensive country). Eurostar is pretty good, but the UK side makes such a production of checking in and boarding the train that its almost as inconvenient as taking a plane (except that Waterloo station is a lot easier to get to than Heathrow, and it puts you out in the Metro network when you get to Paris, rather than way the hell out at DeGaul).

    The one time I've used inter-city rail in the US - the Silver Meteor from South Carolina to Florida - it took as long as a car trip, cost more, and was no more comfortable.

    One thing that no one mentions when discussing rail traffic is other countries' use of rail freight. There's typically a lot of discussion of 'In Japan or in Europe, X percentage of all passenger traffic is carried by rail, but in the US, only a tiny fraction of that number use rail.' While this is true, and to some extent lamentable, no one ever factors in the relative percentages of freight-by-rail.

    In the US, the freight rail network is actually fairly advanced. I know from discussions with an English co-worker, who admits to being a bona fide trainspotter, that the UK rail networks carry a fraction of the freight that the US network carries. A much larger percentage of British freight is carried by lorry. Trucking in the US is also well developed, but still faces very stiff competition from rail.

    So to claim that the US ignores rail at the behest of Big Oil or Big Airlines - or what ever other Big Corporate Boogie-Man is meant to be greasing the palms of our Elected Officials - is Big Hooey. Rail is important in the US. We just use it differently.

    There are some areas where high-speed rail would make a difference. The North-East Corridor is already getting it, but it will be some time before its really up-to-snuff, especially with the cost-overruns and mainanence problems the Acela line's been facing. California (where commuter rail is already in use in the Bay Area, and maybe elsewhere) is another good app. Farthest 'Out There' is my idea for a high-speed rail diamond in Texas. There's a lot of traffic, passenger and otherwise, on I-35, I-45, and I-10 between Dallas-Fort Worth, Austin, San Antonio, and Houston. I go from Dallas to Austin several times a year, and I friggin HATE that stretch of I-35. I'd pay good money for a rail solution. Air travel (Southwest flies that route cheaply) would be a good option, but the hassle of airports on either end means I don't want to mess with it. But rail would be OK. I could catch a bus to the DART light-rail line, down to Union Station, pick up the high-speed rail from there to Austin (it could also serve Waco and Temple/Fort Hood).

    --
    if ($it != $onething) {$it = $another;}
  114. I welcome HSR by a1englishman · · Score: 2, Interesting

    I'm a daily commuter on the Orange County to LA Metrolink rail service, and without it I wouldn't even consider working in downtown. It's a 50~60 mile ride, with 10 stops 2 minute stops, lasting 90 minutes. During which, I get to relax and read the paper. Once in LA, the majority of us hop on the subway to get to our destinations, the rest take the city busses.

    Ever looked into traveling to San Francisco from LA? Yeah, you could fly, take a bus, or drive, but if you want to take a train, Amtrak goes once a day and takes all day. If a HSR system can compete with the airlines, that would be great.

    Say it can't be done? There was a recent program on TLC the other night. France has a high speed rail that gets people around faster than planes. Also, the train can take passengers into downtown, while passengers have to disembark planes many miles from the civic center.

    The fewer roads trains have to cross, the safer and faster they can be. With our suburban sprawl, bridges have to be built over or under roadways. This all adds to the cost of laying track, as well as aquiring land to lay it, locomotives and rolling stock.

    No form of transport in the US is unsubsidized. Airports are owned by governments, roadways are owned by governments. They all receive money from tax revenue.

    1. Re:I welcome HSR by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Amtrak is government subsidized, and it's a flop. The fact that government funds, owns, and zones almost all highways these days tends to have the effect of killing the market in privately owned toll roads.

  115. $10bn is not over the top by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    California, if seen as an individual nation instead of a state, ranks sixth worldwide in GDP. Considering the large economic benefit that a high speed rail will bring (see also: post-war Japan's Shinkansen), $10bn will pay off soon once it's done for sure.

    1. Re:$10bn is not over the top by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Don't worry. That ranking will drop like a rock soon enough.

  116. Come back to Earth, guys by jhylkema · · Score: 1

    This will probably get modded flamebait, but here goes . . .

    This is a sad day for Seattle. The monorail, like the Link light rail, is a train to nowhere. This is yet another Seattle pipedream that's going to turn into a multi-billion-dollar boondoggle. And it will all be paid for with other people's money.

    Don't believe me? Originally, Sound Transit was going to spend ~$2B for a line from the U district to the airport. They've already spent more than $2B and now it's from downtown to one mile from Sea-Tac Airport (i.e., nowhere.) They have not turned a spade of dirt to build this thing. And the monorail buffs think they can build one for what Sound Transit has already blown? Puh-leeeze!

    Prediction: When the monorail is several years late and several billion over budget, its route will be shortened from Interbay to Harbor Island, again, from nowhere to nowhere.

  117. Monorails are a silly waste by Ogerman · · Score: 2

    City planners want to put a Monorail in Pittsburgh too, but I am totally against it. Why? Because frankly, it's a waste of tax dollars. It doesn't solve much problem in proportion to its enormous cost. We're talking many billions of dollars. How much research on alternative energy and fuel cell vehicles could be accomplished with that much money?! This would quite certainly do more to reduce polution and improve the city. Heck, if the money was truly managed wisely with minimal bureaucracy--say by a non-profit group with a couple overseers--we could probably become the Detroit of environmentally-friendly alternative vehicles and put ourselves on the map as a technology leader. But that would actually make sense, and the Democrats who run this town have an extreme aversion to logic and intelligence, so it'd never fly.

    1. Re:Monorails are a silly waste by ainsoph · · Score: 2


      Do cities need public transit or should we all drive everywhere (like in Seattle).?

      Come up to Seattle before you decide what *we* need. OK? Thanks.

  118. Seattle = Assbackwards by Dolemite_the_Wiz · · Score: 1

    I agree this is a Sad Day for Seattle, jhylkema.

    However, the press of the Seattle area kept out some of the important issues that voters were not aware of

    Sound Transit (A light rail system that goes from Tacoma to Seattle with a few stops in between) uses Burlington Northern Rail lines. Burlington Northern dictates the Sound Transit schedule on the frequency of the trains. In short, Sound Transit goes when long ines of Freight Trains are not using the rail lines.

    Sound Transit did a very poor job of geological research in the proposed light rail lines. There are many sections of the original proposed lines that can't be dug or light rail can't be used. This is why the Monorail was proposed.

    The Eastside of Lake Washington (basically all parts East of the Seattle area) wants no part of the paying of a light rail-monorail. Even though the traffic infrastructure on the Eastside of Lake Washington reached it's maximum capacity 15 years ago.

    In short, this whole idea is not going to be beneficial to the Seattle/Tacoma Area as was originally was the goal but to a small number of people who live along the proposed route.

    Chalk another assbackwards move for the State of Washington!!!

    I want my 'L' damnit!!!!

    Dolemite

    LEGAL NOTICE: Spamming my account will subject the offender(s) to liability of $1,000 per message (RCW 19.190.030).

    --
    Save the World! Use a Quote!
  119. The monorail wont help by LibertineR · · Score: 0
    I moved here to Seattle from San Diego.

    The traffic here is the worst I have ever seen. In San Diego, there are so many highways, you can pick one of five different ways to get anywhere. You have 4 SEPARATE freeways leading right into downtown.

    In Seattle, you dont have a lot of choices. If you want to get from Magnolia to Redmond (my commute, you have to go across(5mph crawl) or around (15mph longer crawl) the fucking lake.

    Not to mention that everyone up here drives like my dead grandma drinking a latte in one hand with the other on their cell phone.

    The monorail isnt going to help, because it doesnt go where it needs to go, which is across the LAKE! Who the hell goes to or from Ballard to West Seattle for WORK? NOBODY.

    Total waste, and when they get around to considering something to relieve that joke on 520, where it takes A HOUR to get from Microsoft to the west side (13 miles), they will naturally run out of money.

    They could build another bridge across the lake for what this boondogle is going to cost, so that a bunch of hippies can get from Greenlake to the beach before their coffee cools off.

    1. Re:The monorail wont help by dacetone · · Score: 1

      Sure, we may not go from Ballard to Alki, but I used to go from Ballard to downtown, and people go from West Seattle to downtown. Not to mention, nothing big was ever built in a day, that's why there is more proposed than the Green Line, eventually serving the whole city. If I had to go across the lake everyday, I would move back over there. (When I worked in Redmond, I lived in Kirkland) The 520 is a joke, but this is a plan for Seattle, not the 'burbs.

      As for Seattle drivers == dead latte-wielding yakking grannies, 100% true. That's why I take the bus (16 minutes from 120th to Westlake mall) now.

      --
      Just follow the day, and reach fo
  120. Nothing New by theirpuppet · · Score: 1
    The Seattle monorail system had passed many years ago, and it was big news then. The problem was the the City Council (among others) refused to budget any decent amount of funding for it.


    I had actually been part of grassroots organizations over the years that had attempted to force the City Council to actually include it in the budget. It might also be noted that the original legislation attempted to have a clause that if the Council doesn't budget for the monorail appropriately, they don't get paid. This was a big trend-setter in grassroots proposed legislation.

  121. Anaheim Vegas by ChartBoy · · Score: 1

    The Anaheim-Vegas link won't happen now that the Vegas casino companies have built casinos throughout California (on Indian reservations). Why should the Vegas interests spend the billions to build (or many millions to lobby to use tax $ to build) the fast rail when they can suck wallets locally?

  122. Seattle Feasibility by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Excuse me? I live in Seattle. 130 miles away is the Vancouver BC SkyTrain, which is not quite monorail technology but it's 95% elevated and has been moving people efficiently for a couple decades ... and they're building a second line now. Oh, and you get a wonderful view from it. The Seattle Green Line will not go "from an antique shopping district (not very big) to the beach (not very big)". The northern portion goes through one of Seattle's main residential areas (which was originally a Norwegian fishing town and thus has some kitschy shops as well as the largest number of working-class bars in the city). The southern portion goes to the middle of a very hilly area underserved by transit. It's "near" a beach only on the map: it would take most of an hour and a couple hills to walk from the mono to the beach.

    "That" beach is Alki. There's also Golden Gardens, also an hour's hilly walk from the opposite end of the mono. There's also Magnuson Park (Soundgarden), Matthew's Beach, Madison Park, Seward Park, the bluffs at Discovery Park (although there you're on a cliff high above the beach), etc. And across the Sound are plenty of islands with lots of beaches. The thing that sucks is most of the beaches are rocky except where they've trucked in sand. To get to the big sandy beaches like in California you have to go 90 miles west to the coast.

    Phase 1 of the Green Line will be accessible to a fifth of the city's residents. Besides work commutes, it will access the football stadium, baseball stadium and Seattle Center, which are the three biggest evening/weekend traffic jams. Proposed future extensions would go to Northgate Mall, the Vashon ferry and the NE residential area, twice as fast as the current bus routes.

    The proposed citywide map (5 lines) is here. That would be accessibe to something like 90% of the city's residents.

    The monorail was approved by the voters three times, in spite of a city council that tried to bury it twice in favor of light rail.

    What's wrong with light rail in Seattle? (1) The Rainier Valley portion (the dotted line on the previous map) will travel on surface streets with traffic crossings at a measly 35 MPH max -- hello, Portland MAX and San Jose LR, (2) the underground (northern) portions proved too costly so they were cut--even though Capitol Hill and the U-district would have provided most of the ridership, (3) it doesn't go to Northgate Mall (a northern transit center), which would have allowed dozens of suburban routes to terminate there rather than continuing downtown, instead it will *increase* traffic downtown because trains will displace buses in the downtown tunnel, (4) most people in the areas affected want it underground, which it won't be, (5) many Rainier Valley residents said they prefer no light rail to the current proposal ("just skip us for now and come back when you can do it right") but instead they will be the *first* to get it, (6) the only reason it goes into the Rainier Valley at all rather than along the freeway is to serve the "poorest, most multi-ethnic" neighborhood in town, even though the public-housing project it goes near is being gentrified as we speak and won't have many "poor, multi-ethnic" residents when the line finally starts running.

    Not everybody likes overhead trains, whether light or mono. But at least monorail equalizes the burden because *everybody* has overhead trains. The original Sound Transit proposal (now truncated) puts the northern (rich) portion underground and the southern (poor) portion on the surface. The reason is not discrimination but topographical: the northern portion has to go under hills and a canal. The southern portion transverses a flat valley. But still, the Valley residents don't see why they should be disrupted more than the rest of the city.

    Many citizens tried to get Sound Transit to consider monorail for their line but they flatly refused because it's not "proven technology in the US". No matter that it could be done sooner, would cost less (because of less need to acquire private land), and would blunt much of the neighborhood opposition. People in Rainier are not saying "we don't like ugly overhead trains" -- there's not much of a "view" down there anyway. They are saying, "we don't want our kids killed by (almost silent) surface trains". Because when a kid's ball runs away, the kid goes after it, oncoming train or no.

  123. I do tech support for Tim Eyman... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ...and he's a moron. I wouldn't trust him to budget for a trip to Thriftway to buy groceries, let alone run the state.

    At least there's one good point to your idea: if he actually had the balls to run for office and get elected, then he'd have to deal with the consequences of his disastrous initiatives rather than heckling from the sidelines.

    I'm posting anonymously to protect my employer, not myself.

  124. Solved the shower problem by MichaelPenne · · Score: 2

    By getting an electric motor for my bike-since I moved to the flats and my work is on the hill, I can't come in all sweaty, and so stopped riding for a while.

    But the electric motor (Currie Pro Drive) solved that, I peddle along with it, but don't have to break a sweat to climb the hill.

    It helps some with the cars since I can accelerate pretty quickly. Anyway, I don't think electric bikes are THE alternative, OTOH I drive my car like once a week now:-).

  125. MOD PARENT UP by ssstraub · · Score: 0

    This is quite interesting indeed!

  126. Courage by m11533 · · Score: 1

    The problem that cities such as Seattle have is the attitude displayed in this posting. Government IS the agent of the community. There are times when it is appropriate for the community to act in its interests, and Mass Transit is absolutely one such area. "Competition" is a silly concept when it comes to Mass Transit. Take a look at Seattle and you see there are very few places where the geography provides for the needs lines, be they roads or Mass Transit. It is very much in the community interest to maximize the efficient use of those lines. Thus, it is in the community interest to build a comprehensive Mass Transit system.

    Why has it not been built?

    Because no one has the courage to invest in the future. Instead we measure success by the pennies in the short term. Everyone agrees that NYC, and Manhattan in particular, could not exist without its Mass Transit... in fact, since 9/11 there have been strict limits on who can drive into the city... yet, by the measures imposed on new projects, today the Mass Transit system in NYC would never be built.

    What we need is to have the courage to invest in our future. To recognize that sometimes investment is about building the things needed by our communities. Over the long run, such investment forever change our communities for the better. And they frequently do not stand up to today's financial-only cost-benefit analysis. Not all benefits are financial, nor are reflected in these formulas.

  127. prediction by /dev/trash · · Score: 1

    By 2007, I bet not even 1/4 mile of track will be laid for this thing. Look at the Big Dig in Boston.

  128. Correction....The money has not been budgeted! by patmoore · · Score: 1

    The bill that passed means that the California voters will be voting on building the High Speed Rail System in November 2004 Send me an email at patrick > hsrail > org if you want to help out.

  129. Light rail psychology by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Light rail in Seattle, let's remember, has been a triumph of mediocrity.

    First of all, the frigging thing was shortened from Northgate-to-the-airport to downtown-to-one-mile-short-of-the-airport. The most recent plan bypasses Southcenter Mall, stopping a mile from the airport, and commandeering the bus tunnel, pushing all the downtown express buses up to the surface. It also runs DOWN THE MIDDLE OF MARTIN LUTHER KING JR. WAY. That's right - in the middle of the road. Now, if the ethnic and racial composition of the Rainier Valley was more like that of, oh, say, Magnolia, Sound Transit wouldn't have thought twice about spending an extra billion dollars to go underground. As it stands now, light rail will be a catastrophe for several neighborhoods in South Seattle.

    Let's not even mention the utter uselessness of a commuter train that doesn't even go to the UW, let alone to Northgate. The fact is that light rail technology has been the subject of near religious devotion among the "experts" - urban planners, transportation specialists, and government officials. In fact, one argument against the monorail was that using monorail instead of light rail would "humiliate" the city in the eyes of other cities.

    Right now, light rail is nothing but a status symbol for urban planners and city officials. It doesn't have to be - if it at least touches Southcenter and Northgate, if it gets to the freaking airport, it might be useful as a "spine" for a monorail-based municipal transport system.

    Monorail is cheaper, easier, and more efficient. Already the ETC has suggested extensions to Bothell, Redmond and Federal Way. The pro-monorail campaign ran an underwhelming campaign, letting the anti-populist establishment hammer away for weeks with nary a response. But no matter how the business leaders and intelligensia of Seattle attempt to turn us into a theme-park Latte Land, the people keep screwing things up for them. From the general strike in the early 20th century to the WTO protests to the people voting for monorail 3 times, the people aren't willing to fit into the mold that the elites want us to fit into.

    And I've never been prouder to be a Seattleite. At least in some small corners of the U.S., the people still have a voice.

    Go monorail!

  130. A correction... by joggle · · Score: 1
    1. Freight trains get priority over passenger lines. So if both a trainload of shipping containers and an Amtrak train need the same section of rail, guess who gets to set in a siding.

    Actually, Amtrak gets top priority over freight trains:

    Amtrak was created as a for-profit government corporation that was granted the right of access to the tracks owned by the freight railroads at incremental cost and with operating priority over freight trains.(Amtrak Reform Council)

    Despite this, it looks like Amtrak trains are sometimes late due to freight traffic. The primary reason they're always so late, though, is apparently due to an undersized and/or an incompetent labor force. If you are interested in a detailed account of Amtrak's woes written by someone who is truly fond of trains, check this article out. Unfortunately, since it was written back in June, you'll have to pay 3USD to read it.
  131. Factually incorrect by GnrcMan · · Score: 2

    Hmm...Point (a) can be easily refuted by looking up the numbers for light rail, but I really take issue with the apparently deliberate misleadingness of point (b). The proposed route does not directly connect Ballard and West Seattle. For people not familiar with Seattle and/or the monorail proposal, let me explain the route. The route runs from Ballard (a primarily residential area of Seattle) to downtown Seattle to West Seattle (another residential neighborhood which, I might add, is severely underserved by busses). Additionally, this line is the first in a proposed citywide monorail system, and as a first line, it's about as good as you'll get. Ballard to Downtown and West Seattle to downtown are both routes that are high traffic and a monorail line would likely be well used and helpful.

  132. Seattle and public transit by smoondog · · Score: 3, Informative

    Just remember Seattle is know for its exceedingly poor city planning. For example,

    1. Seattle used to have a trolley system, not unlike the street cars in san francisco. After a moment of genius urban planning it was removed. Click here for pictures.

    2. Seattle couldn't agree on how to build a subway system, so they built a bus *tunnel* through downtown. Just to make it seem like they could intelligently plan for the future, they added tracks for a street car like metro system. They are still unused. (Last year they decided not to make the tunnel exclusive to light rail)

    3. Seattle used to have another hill near downtown. They didn't like it so in 1897 they actually leveled half of it. It wasn't until the 1930's that they actually decided to remove it all. Here is an informative link with pictures.

    4. Seattle's history of poor public planning also took place downtown. After fires and horrible sewage problems, they decided to put the sewage at street level and move the entire street up on story! For an entire neighborhood!

    So Seattle, the town that actually raised its street level, lowered its hills, removed its light rail system only to have it cost in the *billions* to replace it, and when they try to replace it, it is only a bunch of unused tracks, is now spending 1.4 billion on a monorail. No one rides the monorail now, and they think that making it longer is going to change that? Hmm, did anyone tell them monorails are ugly?

    -Sean

    -Sean

    1. Re:Seattle and public transit by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      GM more or less bought out the trolley system in Seattle, as well as several other cities in the US. Story

      The Seattle Center monorail, as it stands, turns a profit every year and attacts over 2.5 million riders a year. Not bad for a line that's only 1 mile long. And no, not all of those riders are tourists. A lot of people park at the Seattle Center and ride the monorail into downtown for work on a daily basis.

    2. Re:Seattle and public transit by Mike+A. · · Score: 1

      What's so ugly about a monorail?

      --

      --
      Do I look like I speak for my employer?
  133. Re:Move it out your wallet into a bureacrat's resu by Rick+the+Red · · Score: 2
    Actually, you're wrong. The city government opposed the Monorail. This is the third time the public has voted to support the Monorail: The first time the city ignored the vote. The second vote forced the city to appropriate the money for a study. And with this vote the people of Seattle decided to tax themselves to build it. The city government has nothing to do with it, which is sort of the point; the government-backed transportation measure was defeated state-wide. The government as proven it can't do it right, and the people are showing them what they should have done all along. Go mono!

    --
    If all this should have a reason, we would be the last to know.
  134. Doesn't need to make money. by sulli · · Score: 2
    In fact, you can make a pretty strong argument that it should not make money. Instead, it should at most break even, and if possible be subsidized, to reduce the cost of commuting by means other than cars and therefore provide an incentive to reduce traffic. Reduced traffic via public transit is much less expensive, and more environmentally friendly, than new roads.

    The great thing about the monorail is that it's elevated and so completely out of traffic - something that makes a huge difference for both speed and reliability. Elevated services are usually opposed by NIMBYs who want to keep their views - since Seattle seems not to have that problem, this has a much greater chance of success.

    --

    sulli
    RTFJ.
  135. Re:Typical Seattle.... You are from San by stefanlasiewski · · Score: 2

    Seattle is also a big city with high population density. More rail transportation would work great there.

    Many people use BART in less dense areas like Richmond, Berkeley, Oakland, Fremont, etc.

    --
    "Can of worms? The can is open... the worms are everywhere."
  136. Re:Ok, pardon my bitterness I take it by jaoswald · · Score: 1

    The most dualistic view in the whole debate is by W. himself.

    "For us or against us"
    "Protect freedom" vs. "hate freedom"
    "Evil-doers"
    "Axis of Evil"
    "Protecting our national security" vs. "Unconcerned about national security"

    For me, that's the discouraging thing about this administration. Every policy pronouncement they make contains an absurdity:

    "Economic stimulus for the current downturn requires tax cuts in 2011"

    "Osama bin Laden attacks the U.S. because he hates freedom." Hates freedom? No, he hates Western civilization! Never mind that bin Laden is presumably in favor of prayer in schools, against abortion, against gay marriage, in favor of "under Allah" in a Pledge of Allegiance, etc., as all "freedom lovers" must, right? Does Vladimir Putin love freedom? Do the Saudi princes?

    "Iraq's WMD are a threat to the U.S." Not even close--a threat to Israel, Iran, Gulf States, most certainly. No attention paid, by the way, to what effect U.S. intervention will have on moderate forces in Iran, where moderates have to defend themselves against the charge that they are friends of the Great Satan. Doesn't matter because Iran is "evil," right?

  137. Re:Feasability? Stuff 140 million by Catbeller · · Score: 2

    Colorado, for instance, takes in $1.70 in Federal highway construction funds for every dollar it pays in Federal taxes.

    What "everyone in the U.S. pays for" is the highways systems for empty states. The rail systems for high-density population states, which do pay more taxes than they get back, are a bargain.

    Same analysis applies to the city/suburb split in rail and road building costs. The per capita boondoggle is in building highways and roads for areas that don't pay for them.

    Curiously, the areas getting massive taxpayer gravy, the low-population areas, are the biggest complainers about taxes.

  138. Re:NY-Boston Buses by jaoswald · · Score: 1

    Entertainment tours (coachne.com) might beat Fung Wah. Modern bus (some of Fung Wah are just jitneys, with no luggage space), $40 round-trip, and it stops at Penn Station in NY (not Chinatown).

  139. What a project for our boy Billy! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    They could build another bridge across the lake for what this boondogle is going to cost, so that a bunch of hippies can get from Greenlake to the beach before their coffee cools off.
    Hippies drink iced coffee. Typically Cafe Campesino Benevolent Blend. Corporate drones drink hot coffee. Typically Starbucks.

    Why don't you ask Microsoft to pay for a monorail link over or under the lake?

    MS claims to be innovative. MS claims they are masters of technology. And everyone agrees that their success has caused a significant part of the traffic problem. And it would be nice to see them spend more money on the community and less on political donations.

    If you were a hippie, that coffee wouldn't hurt so much coming out of your nose.
  140. Re:Ok, pardon my bitterness I take it by mosch · · Score: 1
    republicans aren't all self-righteous right-wingers who have sold their souls to big oil and big business.
    Yes, but our president sold his. of course he also likes spending his time making sure that a felon runs the 'total information awareness' automated big brother system, nominating ultra-conversative judges, signing away our privacy, and basically making it so the only thing that's special about america is the fact that we're rich, and we can kick your ass.
  141. busses by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    busses take up WAY TOO FUCKING MUCH road space. a lot of seattle's streets don't have space for a third lane or a bus-only shoulder, so they just sit in traffic and block the whole fucking road while everyone gets on and off, made worse if there's a wheelchair.

    i was a daily bus rider and loved it (the hell i'm going to pay $150/mo for downtown outdoor parking where people will probably dump birdseed all over my car), but having lived in the u-dist for a number of years (and later magnolia), the busses, while good, still suck ass.

  142. It's about time by yosoyjay · · Score: 1

    As a resident of Seattle, I'm overly pleased with the outcome of the monorail vote. There are basically no empty places in the city to build new housing. Old single home neighborhoods are being torn down and replaced with medium and high density apartment buildings. This inevitably leads to increased density -> increased local population -> increased traffic. This type of environment is perfect for non-grade level mass transit.

    Although the project is expensive, it is still cheaper than light rail, the only other non-grade level option. And the project would become more expensive and difficult to implement should we sit by idle and watch as density and traffic continue to increase.

    I look forward to riding the completed monorail and hope it succeeds in creating a viable, rapid trasportation alternative to being stuck in traffic in a car or bus.

  143. Re:Feasibility? by funkapus · · Score: 2

    I guess a monorail probably looks less cluttered than 2 steel rails, but I can't think how it can be safer, faster, more reliable, or cheaper than steel rail.

    Safer: doesn't run at grade, thus no chance of collision with cars/pedestrians. Also has rubber tires, so stops more quickly. Also does not derail.

    Faster: doesn't run at grade, so nothing gets in the way. Monorail has the capability to be on time, every time, without delaying anything else. It can also presumably accelerate to speed faster, given the rubber tires.

    Reliability: in the forty years that the existing short-line Seattle Monorail has been operating, there have been something like four train-stopping failures. Two were in the last six months. That's a great record. Additionally, since the monorail doesn't interact with cars or pedestrians, it can be automated.

    Cheaper: the beams can largely be fabricated offsite and then simply stuck on posts, which is cheaper and less disruptive to businesses along the path than laying rail. Automation will also reduce labor costs.

    you can buy somewhat standard diesel multiple units from Siemens or Bombardier who have been making them for decades; and start making revenue. OTOH, who makes monorail cars for off the shelf purchase?

    Well, Bombardier makes them, for one. Bombardier has been consulting with Seattle on this very initiative. Hitachi and Alweg are a couple others I could name. There are more, that's all I can think of off the top of my head.

  144. Great another waste of $10B by Archfeld · · Score: 2

    We've got BART here in the bay area which is an abject failure, and the Cal train which loses billions every year. Mass transit only works in very tight city area's. People in spread out urban areas will not put up with the enormous delays and the added time on their day, nor is it cheaper anymore to ride bart to SF vs paying for Gas and parking. I just love paying for idiot politicians' pipe dreams.

    --
    errr....umm...*whooosh* *whoosh* Is this thing on ?
  145. Are the taxes regional? by pizzaman100 · · Score: 1
    I'm curious, is the motor vehicle excise tax just for the residents of Seattle, or is it state wide?

    The monorail might be great for the people in the Sea-Tac area, but why should someone from Spokane, Yakima, Vancouver, etc want their taxes raised for a regoinal Seattle transit?

    It reminds me of the project to build Safeco field. It was great for Seattle, but why did the rest of the state have to pay?

    1. Re:Are the taxes regional? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The MVET for the Monorail is only for citizens of the City of Seattle - or anyone who registers a car within the city limits, to be precise, but I sort of assume that's primarily citizens :) If you don't own a car within the city limits, you don't pay for the Monorail - unless you ride it after it's built and pay a fare.

  146. Progress by Xevo · · Score: 3, Insightful

    It seems that people are pretty strongly divided over this issue, and rightfully so: billions of dollars funded entirely by a city on a monorail system is unprecedented. Is it really necessary? Will it be (from an engineering standpoint) structurally sound? Is it cost-effective? Who knows. But at least it's a willingness to try something new. Progress is never made without change.

    I apologize for posting this without being a resident of the city of Seattle. This automatically makes me flamebait for all those who are paying out of their own pockets for the project. I respect your (citizens of Seattle) opinions because they come from the frontlines of the battle.

    However, as was brought up earlier, is there no reason to build a skyscraper without building the top floor first? Or starting a space program without knowing exactly how to get a man to the moon? I think not.

    I personally like the example of the space program. I think that it is an excellent thing to have scientific minds devoted to getting human beings off of this rock we call Earth. Are the costs exorbitant? Of course. When the Apollo program was first begun, what was our motivation? "Beat those damn Russians to the moon." What kind of a reason was that? And yet if we had never started thinking about moving beyond this planet we may never have developed satellites (as a practical application) or be on our way to exploring further. The path of stagnation leads nowhere.

    Another topic for /.ers: quantum computing. Can we build a useful one now? No. Does that mean that we shouldn't spend money on it? Of course not!

    I know that the monorail system may seem to many people to not be very practical at all now, but if at some point in the future all of America's major cities develop mass-transit systems (possibly mono-rail), Seattle would be remembered as the catalyst. There is no way that people can see so far into the future to know that a project is doomed to failure: some of mankind's greatest discoveries were made purely by accident! ("Eureka!" he shouted in joy and ran down the streets naked) Perhaps the monorail project will fail. Okay. But if it succeeds, aren't the possible benefits worth current risks?

  147. Re:Possible interference from oil and/or auto firm by tshak · · Score: 2

    The UnRedmond Store: Show your true colors.

    It should be noted that the UnRedmond Store runs on the Microsoft.NET Framework.

    --

    There is no longer anything that can be done with computers that is nontrivial and clearly legal. -- Paul Phillips
  148. Mornings and Evenings by LionKimbro · · Score: 2

    There are a lot of Monorail commuters- I used it every day for a few months, morning and evening. The thing is to use it Mon-Fri mornings and evenings; then you'll see the regulars.

  149. Where's all this money coming from again.....? by Deftot · · Score: 1

    I recently moved to the east coast from Seattle, and the posting of this article brings up an important point. Hasn't the area already spent some millions of dollars on planning this monorail? And didn't we cut the transportation budget by billions of dollars with the $30 tabs? Why are we spending the rest of our transportaion budget for the next 10000 years on a monarail around downtown? Just wondering

    1. Re:Where's all this money coming from again.....? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      We spent just under $6 million planning this monorail, which we just voted on this month. There were two previous initiatives to begin the planning process and to dedicate some additional money for planning.

      Remember that the monorail is strictly a city-limits affair - if you don't live in the city limits, you don't pay for it. The $30 car tabs thing [state initiative 695] impacts the entire state's transportation budget.

      Finally, projections indicate less than 30 years required to pay off the capital expense of this first, Green Line monorail. The goal is, like Vancouver's SkyTrain, to run at least break-even [if not show a profit] over time.

  150. Don't forget Safety and Accessibility by Proton751 · · Score: 3, Insightful

    First off, I also live in Seattle, and I regularly use the monorail when I need to get downtown quickly. I don't own a car. I haven't had one since 1996, and I don't want one. There are two important issues regarding transportation that hardly get mentioned at all: Safety and Acessibility. How many people have been killed while riding the monorail? In terms of personal safety, the monorails must be safer than even airplaines. What about people who are not capable of driving? I think that people in wheelchairs will appeciate their increased mobility provided by an expanded monorail system. Does riding the monorail require a vision test? Do you need to memorise a truckload of driving laws? Also, I believe that it's safe for monorail passengers to talk on a cell phone or eat a sandwich while riding the monorail. I don't like to see car drivers doing anything other than driving their car.

  151. Telecommute by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Why people don't telecommute?
    It's 21 century. The E-century. Why go back to unpopular skycraper and mass transit, while you can sit at home, and do everything through computer?
    The existing highway is enough for vacation travel.

  152. Time to get out more by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Well, apparently king county metro disagrees with you.
    http://transit.metrokc.gov/tops/bus/tunnel.h tml

    From googling, some of the buses are pure electric, but most are hybrids.

    OTH, the waterfront Streetcar really is PURE electric.

  153. Re:It's about time (really! It IS about *time*.) by Dirtside · · Score: 2

    Would the Interstate Highway System have been built if the federal government hadn't gone and done it? No -- there would have been little motivation (not to mention vastly insufficient resources) for any private corporation to ever build such a thing.

    The free market is a good thing, but it is not a magic-bullet solution to all problems -- so-called "market failures" are where the free market will not work, and public transportation is one of them. Corporations have only one incentive: make as much money as possible. Public transportation lends itself to a natural monopoly; competition makes it vastly inefficient (imagine if you had five or ten times as many bus stops, train stations, lines of rail, etc. because each company refuses to share the use of its transport resources).

    Your facts aren't even right; there are numerous highly successful urban rail systems all over the world, most of which are government-run. Last month I was in D.C. and got to use their excellent rail system. Trains run often, on time, aren't overcrowded, and are cheaper than owning a car... and the whole thing is run by the government.

    --
    "Destroy science and religion. Science would re-emerge exactly the same; but not religion." - Penn Jillette, paraphrased
  154. Re: disCourageMent by DuBois · · Score: 2
    What we need is to have the courage to invest in our future.

    Let's take this disastrous sentence apart:

    The second word is we, one of the great weasel words of the politician. "We" don't need courage, because "we" can't have courage. Only individuals can be courageous and have courage. A government collective can spend a lot of money, not spend a lot of money, create useless transportation "projects" or let the free market provide transportation. But a government collective cannot have, or exhibit "courage."

    Lots of people have "need" of many things. I, for example, "need" a Gulfstream G550, because it's fast, fun, and I'd enjoy flying it. But unless a very large meteorite full of platinum lands in my patio, I'm not going to get one, because I haven't (yet) given enough service to my fellow humans to warrant getting together enough money to pay for a G550. Spending 1.4 Billion for a monorail from nowhere to nowhere is a similar "need". Why not think a litte more out of the box and spend the $1.4 billion on a fleet of helicopters that fly over everything? (oh, I forgot, that d*** Seattle weather, sigh) It'd almost certainly be cheaper in the long run.

    There is no such thing as courageously spending someone else's money. Courage is taking money you've worked hard for, and investing it in some risky project that might or might not prove profitable. If profit (somehow a "dirty" word to most people who think collectively) were allowed by the PUCs of the world, transport solutions would spring up overnight. And taxpayers, exhausted and nearly bankrupted as it is, wouldn't have to pay a cent.

    Governments do not "invest", they spend, usually into a black hole like "public" transportation or the infamously disastrous "drug war." True investment (see above, re: courage) is individuals risking their money and their lives in projects directed by the free market (not politicians) that may or may not produce a profit. But if there is no possibility of a profit (because a PUC has decreed a monopoly, for example), no such investment will occur. To repeat: governments do not, should not, and cannot "invest." That was the "American System" that Henry Clay devised, and Abraham Lincoln imposed, with a lot of help from another disastrously damaging war.

    Governments are not prescient, and they almost always choose a possible "future" that turns out to have been wrong, or at least useless. The business of government should be only the protection of life, liberty, and property. All the rest should be left up to the free market choices of individuals. Even the much vaunted New York City subway system was built as a private, profit-making instution that leased the property from the city, but was expected to make its own profit, not be a continuing burden on the taxpayers.
    Let's have the courage to get rid of "public" (read: government) solutions to problems cause by government overregulation.
    --
    The IPCC has purposely engineered a massive scientific fraud.
  155. Re:It's about time (really! It IS about *time*.) by DuBois · · Score: 2
    Last month I was in D.C. and got to use their excellent rail system. Trains run often, on time, aren't overcrowded, and are cheaper than owning a car... and the whole thing is run by the government.

    Consider the fact that the Washington, DC government is actually the Congress of these formerly free United States and things begin to make more sense. For example, have you investigated how much operating subsidy, coerced from taxpayers, is built into your "cheaper than owning a car" ticket on the DC Metro? My wild guess would be at least a 100% subsidy, but that's probably too low. And my other wild guess is that the subsidy is most likely a Federal subsidy, considering the Federal clientele that normally rides the DC Metro.

    And I never said that government transportation systems were uniformly horrible to ride. They're often pleasant (although also often very slow). The burden to the taxpayer is the horrible part.

    If a transportation project makes sense, and will provide benefits to people, everybody will pay the price in the cost of tickets, not the cost of taxes.

    We're on the verge of subsidizing the formerly profitable airline business in this country, mostly because political meddlers have determined that the only way to make airline travel safe is to strip-search 70-year-old grandmas on the way to visiting their grandchildren.

    Why not strip-search every person who enters a New York City subway entrance? After all, many subway stations are adjacent to (if not directly under) many of the city's remaining skyscrapers. Ludicrous, you say? Well, so is strip-searching grandmas with one-way tickets on the airlines.

    --
    The IPCC has purposely engineered a massive scientific fraud.
  156. Don't complain suburbanite. by yosoyjay · · Score: 1

    You know full well living in the suburbs means having to drive for anything besides your morning jog. It's the nature of the beast. The reality is that it is too expensive to have good mass transit service where there is no mass. The density is in the city, that's where the majority of transit should go.

    Park and Ride is the best bet for suburbanites who want to use mass transit. There is no way you can expect decent bus/rail service through all those spaced out communities it would cost too much money. A light rail system of park and ride lots throughout the region would be the service I'd ask for.

  157. There is even a word for "extreme apathy"... by IBitOBear · · Score: 2

    And the word is "Antipathy". While the literal definition holds words like "distaste" and "enmity" as synonyms (see Merriam-Websters online for a nice impartial dictionary) the common usage I have heard all my life is "extreme apathy".

    To quote the old joke...

    Teacher: "Are you ignorant? or just plain apathetic?"
    Student: "I don't know... and I don't care!"

    --
    Innocent people shouldn't be forced to pay for inferior software development.
    --"Code Complete" Microsoft Press
  158. Some of us are trying to fix LA by tk422 · · Score: 1
  159. Vegas is putting in a monorail too by jlouderb · · Score: 1

    I just got back from Comdex, and Vegas is adding a monorail from the convention center to the strip. During past comdexes you could wait hours in cab lines and traffic wouldn't move for days. Of course now that the show is so small, it was easy to get around -- but I'll still ride the monorail over some being toted along by some washed up gambler just jonesing to put more nickels into the slot machines. jim

  160. welcome to floridas world by smeg168 · · Score: 1

    we approved high speed rail a year ago and no one wants to actually touch it or start on it. in the recent mayorial race they wouldnt even mention it or how it will be funded.

  161. 2007 ??? Houston will have a light rail in 2004 by tiomapengineer · · Score: 1
  162. Old and Tired Transit Systems by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    One reason public transportation turns many people off is that you have to stop at every station/bus stop along the line. This greatly exaggerates the time it takes to get anywhere. Even when I ride on the transit systems that are considered successful (NYC, Chicago, Boston, DC), I spend at least half of my "travel time" on a bus, a train, or a bench that isn't moving. These public transit systems simulate traffic jams very well.

    I like the idea of a personal rapid transit system like Taxi 2000. Something like this is dirt cheap to build when compared to light rail and monorail, intrudes less into existing infrastructure, and travelers don't make any stops until they reach their destinations.

    A fresh approach like this would appeal to more people than another elevated train or subway system. I live north of Seattle so I couldn't vote against the monorail, but it makes me sad that so much money will be spent on a transit system that is 40 years out of date before construction even begins.

    Seattle has a reputation for being cutting edge. They invented Starbucks and grunge. They flew 707s upside down in public. The monorail measure is an excellent opportunity to make some real progress in public transportation and set new horizons for every other city on the planet. Instead of taking the risks, I'm afraid some gutless, powermongering bureaucrats are going to follow the path of least resistance and build us a brand new, out-of-date behemoth that nobody will ride.

  163. Re:Possible interference from oil and/or auto firm by carlivar · · Score: 1
    Quote: in the past, this nation had a lot more trolley, El, and miscellaneous sorts of commuter train tech infrastructure than it does now. In a sort of ghastly partnership, the big automotive interests convinced local governments to rip out the trolley tracks, the El lines, and the like

    I used to think this, too. Specifically in regards to the old Pacific Electric urban train system in Los Angeles, which was at one time the largest interurban train system in the world.

    The "urban legend" was that the auto and tire manufacturers got rid of it all. Totally wrong. The reason it failed is because it was privately run and it did not make money. In other words, people didn't ride it. Now that may not be the case now if it was re-built -- things have changed quite a bit. But if you're going to say automotive interests got trolleys and trains ripped out, at least provide a link that expands upon this, because it's wrong.

    If you'd like my link to back it up, just go here.

    Carl

    --
    Vote Libertarian
  164. Imagine by John Lennon by LPetrazickis · · Score: 1

    Imagine there's no traffic, It's easy if you try, No smog around us, Above us only sky, Imagine a Beowulf cluster of monorails too... Imagine there's no Mazdas, It isnt hard to do, Nothing to speed or drive for, No pollution too, Imagine all the people living life in peace... Imagine no SUVs, I wonder if you can, No need for size or power, A mass transit for humans. Imagine a Beowulf cluster Of monorails too... You may say Im a dreamer, but Im not the only one, I hope some day you'll join us, And the world will live as one.

    --
    Is this a sigs-optional kind of place? 'Cause I am totally down with that if you know what I mean.
  165. Imagine Redux by LPetrazickis · · Score: 1

    Imagine there's no traffic,
    It's easy if you try,
    No smog around us,
    Above us only sky,

    Imagine a Beowulf cluster
    of monorails too...
    Imagine there's no Mazdas,
    It isnt hard to do,

    Nothing to speed or drive for,
    No pollution too,
    Imagine all the people
    living life in peace...

    Imagine no SUVs,
    I wonder if you can,
    No need for size or power,
    A mass transit for humans.

    Imagine a Beowulf cluster
    Of monorails too...
    You may say Im a dreamer,
    but Im not the only one,
    I hope some day you'll join us,
    And the world will live as one.

    --
    Is this a sigs-optional kind of place? 'Cause I am totally down with that if you know what I mean.
  166. Re:Feasability? (of air) by Banjonardo · · Score: 2

    There are people who travel from SF to LA every day for work? HOLY SHIT!

    --

    -----

    Score 3? For what? Being wrong, at length? - smirkleton

  167. Re:Yes! Campbell Scott's idea from the movie Singl by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I'd vote for that one, it was region wide and might actually help the traffic problem. This one is just inside the city, and all it does is give another option to people who already ride the bus. It also makes car owners foot the bill for something most of them couldn't use on a daily basis if they wanted to. The region's traffic problem is the freeways that go between Seattle, Bellevue, Redmond, Renton, Tacoma, and Everett. The Seattle City Council seems short sighted and selfish, thinking that Seattle is its own little world and can solve its own traffic problem.

  168. "High speed" California rail? by fjm03 · · Score: 1
    Take a look at the proposed route and even an American third grader realizes that the high speed is wasted on a route that has stops every 25 miles.The longest leg is only 95 miles.

    The route structure leaves the automobile king and the result will be a public monies black hole that benefits only the contractors.

    As a comparison an automobile can beat a small, general aviation aircraft from airport ramp to airport ramp if the distance between airports is less than 60 nautical miles.

  169. Re:Feasibility? by J.+Random+Software · · Score: 2

    Did anyone else think it was just a bit suspicious that the Seattle Center/Westlake monorail (which had been running flawlessly for years) broke down twice in a row just a couple of months before the citywide vote?

  170. MONORAIL by bobdole34 · · Score: 0

    hehe

    The Monorail Song
    9F10 - 14th January 1993

    [Lyle Lanley] Well sir, there's nothin' on earth like a genuine, bonafide, electrified, six-car monorail!
    What'd I say?
    [Ned Flanders] Monorail!
    [Lyle] What's it called?
    [Patty & Selma] Monorail
    [Lyle] That's right, monorail!
    [All chant] Monorail, monorail, monorail...
    [Ms Hoover] I hear those things are awfully loud
    [Lyle] It glides as softly as a cloud
    [Apu] Is there a chance the track could bend?
    [Lyle] Not on your life, my Hindu friend
    [Barney] What about us braindead slobs?
    [Lyle] You'll be given cushy jobs
    [Grampa] Were you sent here by the devil?
    [Lyle] No, good sir, I'm on the level
    [Chief Wiggum] The ring came off my pudding can
    [Lyle] Take my pen knife, my good man
    I swear it's Springfield's only choice
    Throw up your hands and raise your voice!
    Monorail!
    What's it called?
    Monorail!
    Once again!
    Monorail!
    [Marge] But Main Street's still all cracked and broken
    [Bart] Sorry, mom, the mob has spoken
    [All] Monorail! Monorail!
    Monorail!
    Monorail!
    [Homer] Mono- d'oh!

    --
    "Failure of Windows operating systems is extremely rare. If it happens, it is usually due to operating system file c
  171. Re:Yes! Campbell Scott's idea from the movie Singl by Peterus7 · · Score: 1

    The monorail is gonna rock... I have to commute there a lot and that will make it a lot more... interesting? But with all the nice sights you also get the smelly bums. :-/

  172. Great Seattle Monorail Coverage by Wireless+Joe · · Score: 1

    The Stranger, a local weekly, has some great coverage of the monorail issue.

    That is, if you were pro-monorail. Lots of dish on the anti-monorail campaigners, too.

  173. Troll... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Troll alert, send in the bombers...

  174. Re:Feasibility? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Suspicious? No. Ironic? Probably.

    The folks who run the current line indicated they had a bad batch of tires.

    Also, one of the trains was undergoing renovation [there are only two] when the other train died; typical evacuation procedure is to do a "train-to-train" process, rather than having the fire department come out, but since there was only one train...

  175. Re:Feasibility? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Monorail Malaysia is another. Severn-Lamb also makes trainsets, although they are smaller than the others.

    On switching: numerous Japanese lines have switches in use daily. See specifically:

    http://www.monorails.org/tMspages/TokyoH.html

    referencing the Tokyo-Haneda line, operating since 1964.

  176. Re:It's about time (really! It IS about *time*.) by Dirtside · · Score: 2
    Why not strip-search every person who enters a New York City subway entrance? After all, many subway stations are adjacent to (if not directly under) many of the city's remaining skyscrapers. Ludicrous, you say? Well, so is strip-searching grandmas with one-way tickets on the airlines.
    The rest of your post is basically a loaded "libertarian" diatribe, but this particular part is an example of an egregious logical fallacy, not to mention false exaggeration. You imply that everyone, even harmless grandmas, are getting strip-searched every time they takes a flight. This is provably false: I took two flights (from LA to DC and back) and wasn't even asked to remove my shoes. Neither was my wife, nor were 95%+ of the other passengers. (That was the exaggeration part.) The logical fallacy is that because subway passengers are not strip-searched, strip-searching airplane passengers is ludicrous. Even if airplane passengers were being strip-searched (which they are not, except in very rare situations, usually when they do something stupid), the fact remains that bringing down a skyscraper by crashing a plane into it is a lot simpler than bringing it down by somehow accessing its underground areas (presumably with explosives). There's only so many airports; monitoring access to airplanes is a lot simpler than monitoring access to the literally hundreds of thousands of individual access points to tall buildings.

    I don't know what your actual age or station are, but you write like someone who just discovered these "ideals" and hasn't had much practice applying them to real life. Basically, you sound like a first-year college student who's just taken his first couple of econ and philosophy classes... so for your sake, I really hope that you *are* (everyone goes through that phase in college).

    --
    "Destroy science and religion. Science would re-emerge exactly the same; but not religion." - Penn Jillette, paraphrased
  177. Last Post! by alpg · · Score: 1

    If just one piece of mail gets lost, well, they'll just think they forgot
    to send it. But if *two* pieces of mail get lost, hell, they'll just think
    the other guy hasn't gotten around to answering his mail. And if *fifty*
    pieces of mail get lost, can you imagine it, if *fifty* pieces of mail get
    lost, why they'll think someone *else* is broken! And if 1Gb of mail gets
    lost, they'll just *know* that Arpa [ucbarpa.berkeley.edu] is down and
    think it's a conspiracy to keep them from their God given right to receive
    Net Mail ...
    -- Casey Leedom

    - this post brought to you by the Automated Last Post Generator...