California Will Not Complete $77 Billion High-Speed Rail Project (reuters.com)
An anonymous reader quotes a report from Reuters: California Governor Gavin Newsom said on Tuesday the state will not complete a $77.3 billion planned high-speed rail project, but will finish a smaller section of the line. "The project, as currently planned, would cost too much and take too long. There's been too little oversight and not enough transparency," Newsom said in his first State of the State Address Tuesday to lawmakers. "Right now, there simply isn't a path to get from Sacramento to San Diego, let alone from San Francisco to (Los Angeles). I wish there were," he said. Newsom said the state will complete a 110-mile (177 km) high-speed rail link between Merced and Bakersfield. In March 2018, the state forecast the costs had jumped by $13 billion to $77 billion and warned that the costs could be as much as $98.1 billion.
California planned to build a 520-mile system in the first phase that would allow trains to travel at speeds of up to 220 miles per hour in the traffic-choked state from Los Angeles to San Francisco and begin full operations by 2033. Newsom said he would not give up entirely on the effort. "Abandoning high-speed rail entirely means we will have wasted billions of dollars with nothing but broken promises and lawsuits to show for it," he said. "And by the way, I am not interested in sending $3.5 billion in federal funding that was allocated to this project back to Donald Trump."
California planned to build a 520-mile system in the first phase that would allow trains to travel at speeds of up to 220 miles per hour in the traffic-choked state from Los Angeles to San Francisco and begin full operations by 2033. Newsom said he would not give up entirely on the effort. "Abandoning high-speed rail entirely means we will have wasted billions of dollars with nothing but broken promises and lawsuits to show for it," he said. "And by the way, I am not interested in sending $3.5 billion in federal funding that was allocated to this project back to Donald Trump."
Something that can't go on forever, won't.
Or maybe it really should be - sooner or later, you run out of other people's money.
"There is more worth loving than we have strength to love." - Brian Jay Stanley
>> would cost too much and take too long. There's been too little oversight and not enough transparency
That's usually a feature, not a bug, in government projects. How can you pay off your buddies if people can see who's getting paid?
Because EVERYONE wants to be in Merded!
"Never the twains shall meet."
The really sad part is it won't even make it to Shelbyville.
"There is more worth loving than we have strength to love." - Brian Jay Stanley
I am a democrat and one of those who voted against it and campaigned against it and strongly oppose high speed rail in west coast. We don't have enough density and have poor coverage of door to door by public transport. So taking high speed rail will not save much time and the cost will be exorbitant as it passes through very few urban areas (400 mile distance between LA to SF without any major city in between).
Ineptocracy (in-ep-toc'-ra-cy) - a system of government where the least capable to lead are elected by the least capable of producing, and where the members of society least likely to sustain themselves or succeed, are rewarded with goods and services paid for by the confiscated wealth of a diminishing number of producers.
i was sure that california was going to have space-based solar power since three years by now
and high-speed rail is mathematically possible and scientifically plausible
so how come we don't have one
oh wait let's build it on maaaaaaars
now the people will come
Ironically, many of the cost overruns are for dealing with things like environmental impact, routing through areas that don't want it, then routing around those areas that have the political clout to get excluded, etc.
Why can China figure out how to construct 18,000 miles of high speed rail, and we can't even figure out how to connect LA to SF?
High speed rail... dark side of the moon... mass production of consumer goods... America is failing repeatedly, with or without Trump.
That’s taxpayer money earmarked by the federal congress for your boondoggle that you don’t want anymore.
Send it back - or have you forgotten that the Democrats are the ones who control the budget right now?
I see this as High Speed Rail is simply not in the mindset of Americans regardless of their political alignment. Perhaps how it got this far is something unusual. We have no problem of spending trillions on "infrastructure" in Iraq and Afghanistan with nothing to show for it, but trying to spend a small fraction of that ***here*** on our own country, everyone screams it's so expensive!
mfwright@batnet.com
Remind me... how did the last civil war go for the secessionists?
It'd be a shame of Trump ordered the arrest of Newsom and anyone else not obeying federal law.
No doubt #Resist will start a drum circle in protest, that'll show em!
Well, I'll build a chunk in the plains and call it close.....
It looks like it basically goes nowhere compared to the plan! You missed all 4 cities you were aiming for.
They won't follow through on any of their other hair-brained ideas, either, because they aren't feasible in this thing called reality. Keep the echo chamber going, though!
"And by the way, I am not interested in sending $3.5 billion in federal funding that was allocated to this project back to Donald Trump."
"We can only afford to waste federal money on this project." Well that is refreshingly honest, but I suspect this will come back to haunt the state when FEMA spending starts coming up again.
create a contract that penalizes the other party for late delivery? If you give the contractor 5x the base price and still have nothing to show for it, you should be jailed.
Government contracts are not supposed to be an endless trough of money.
Elon Musk proposed a far better and cheaper plan and they ignored it. I hope he tweets mad S about it now to rub it in their faces. Stupid bureaucrats.
"In January 2017, the California Legislative Analyst’s Office said by several measures California is, indeed, a donor state, but just barely. It receives $0.99 in federal expenditures per dollar of taxes paid"
So, it's about dead even. Since California based companies and individuals have written off so many state and local taxes on their federal income tax returns for so long, they effectively short out the federal government in favor of state and local taxes. Since the TCJA, there has been a cap on the SALT (state and local taxes) deductions you can make. So it will likely change in the future.
Before TCJA, if you made $100,000 a year and you lived in California, you paid to Uncle Sam less than if you made $100,000 a year and lived in Kentucky (since Kentucky had lower state and local taxes). In fact, California is the highest SALT state, so it paid the lowest to Uncle Sam, all else being equal.
Now, it's closer to normal.
But don't let \ stupid little things like facts keep you from getting angry.
The original route: Sacramento/LA. Why? California's two big population centers are LA and the SF Bay Area. That should have been the target route from the outset.
The real "Libtards" are the Libertarians!
The working homeless
The homeless vets
The homeless that fell through the cracks during the last economic downturn.
The mentally ill homeless
Affordable housing.
Mental health access
Training
Spend that money where it is needed, ON THE HOMELESS
Anonymous comments are as pathetic as the anonymous "sources" that contaminate gutless journalism from the New York Time
$13 billion?
A launch loop, even with needed scientific research, would have only cost around $10 billion and you'd get cheap access to space on top of that.
Heck, at the cost of an airplane flight you could just be shuttling people out to the Pacific and dropping them back onto the city like a daily-commuter version of Warhammer 40k drop pods.
I know that 6 million tons isn't really that much American fat to move annually. But the frequent missile-like return trajectories even have horrible environmental impact built-in. Basically trowing people from LA to SF through low orbit is a perfect fit for State-level stupid ideas for rapid transit.
Yes, I'm not serious. Nobody in California would ever want a transport system that causes horrible environmental impact. Unless the traffic jams hurt Almond sales. Or somehow made the wait at LAX worse.
Sucks to be you where you can't write off your local and state taxes. Oh no, what are you going to do now.
;o)
Have more working/tax paying people move out? More illegals move in.
Sucks to be you!
Anonymous comments are as pathetic as the anonymous "sources" that contaminate gutless journalism from the New York Time
As much of a fan of high speed rail as I am, this project from the beginning was plagued by many issues:
- Distance of SF-LA being just beyond the edge of air/rail travel decision break point
- Lots of intractable property rights issues along the route (and lack of political willingness to exert eminent domain for a more reasonable route)
- High required labor and engineering cost (union requirements)
- Backwards approach to do the easiest part / least useful segment first
- Management team that kept moving the target (or was deceived) on cost, geotechnical feasibility, political backing
As a result, I concluded that despite how good it would be as a showcase project, this was not anywhere near the top of the list of cost-effective things you would invest in to improve CA transportation issues. And now they've had to embrace reality.
I would even say, the whole thing should be canned rather than continuing to dump money into a stupid central valley rail that no one will use. Bakersfield to Modesto? Tell me who's going to take that train...
The worst thing is that this will set a bad example / leave people burned and resistant to trying it again. Sometimes, we really do need authoritarian-style government to clear out resistance when a good project is identified but individual interests bog it down.
whenever a taxpayer funded operation is, ahem, railroaded into poor planing, cost overruns and all the other excessive wastage. Burn that fucker to the ground and walk away from it. It's not worth another cent.
Every modern country I ever visited has extensive passenger rail systems that everybody uses. But we can't afford it.
Military adventures in the Middle east costing hundreds of billions? No problem. But no new infrastructure. That's socialism or something.
That only makes sense when you realize the 1% aren't the producers.
That is what Democrat left wing dreams are made of. The rail line to nowhere for no one. This is why California is going down the toilet.
Corporatism != Free Market
I told a bunch of idiots that were all for it at the very beginning years ago that this mess wouldnt work and of course they wouldn't listen to me.
A country consists of different areas. Some areas are in more economically favourable areas than others.
Coastal areas are generally better than inland, for trade and the sea as a resource.
Border areas are generally better than nonborder, because you benefit from cross-border trade.
Good farmland is a benefit.
Good freshwater access is a benefit.
California is just breaking even. When California is just breaking even, the situation is very bad and someone has messed up massively.
Washington state taxpayers would like you to give that 3.5 billion back to the US Treasury regardless of who happens to be President.
There goes a third of their fresh water supply. Well, I'm sure those other states adjacent will be happy for their increased water allocation. Then all those tariffs on things like almonds.
Where I'm from, we call it "Communism"
After construction for the first half of BART finished nearly 50 years ago, the BART extension to the South Bay will finally open in the next year or two. Here's a picture of President Richard Nixon riding BART in 1972.
The idea that the 1% has all the power is a myth. The IRS tax stats are freely available for anyone to see and analyze. The 1% (everyone making approx $500k per year or more) only accounts for 19% of total income in the U.S. The vast majority of economic power in the U.S. (64% of all income) rests with those making $50k-$500k per year.
This is also why the fantasies about giving the 1% a 90% tax rate won't really accomplish much. The 1% simply doesn't make enough money. If you taxed them at 90% (which with certain state tax rates would be a 100% total tax rate), that would only bring in enough money to pay for about a third of the Federal budget. Paying for the Federal government at its current size requires a significant tax rate on those making $50k to $500k, and increasing Federal spending means the taxes on those people has to increase to pay for it.
That said, the ineptocracy happens because currently 61% of the adult population makes less than $50k, and 43% of adults make less than $30k. If you don't flatten income distribution so a majority of the population makes the majority of income, the majority of the population will simply vote to take via government programs what they're not being paid enough to buy on their own. And the end result will be an ineptocracy.
After all this money spent, they never asked the most important one: Is there a chance the track could bend?
Looks like this so does not bode well for one of the cornerstones of the Green New Deal which envisions cris-crossing the USA with high speed rail. Next on the Deal's list for red pill economic reality - the paying for those who are "unwilling to work."
Unless you're trying to get from downtown Los Angeles to downtown San Francisco during rush hour!
I've got some good news for you, since it takes about six hours to drive from Los Angeles to San Francisco (yes I have done this) you're only going to be in one rush hour.
"There is more worth loving than we have strength to love." - Brian Jay Stanley
Yeah, don't build it between two points anyone might actually ride it between, like southern LA to San Diego or something if you want an 80 mile run.
*smh*
What modern country have you visited that is as big at the United States and as geographically diverse?
No two countries are alike - a rail system that works in one country will not work in another.
Not sure about San Diego - LA, but they already have OK commuter rail between San Jose and SF - well at least it seemed OK the few times I've taken it, maybe it had issues for more regular users. a high speed rail line to somewhere north of Oakland would probably be a great idea, that has a subway but frankly it sucks, is slow, and is SUPER packed at rush hour so it could really use another channel of service that was as fast to get from the north end of Oakland down to SF. It would probably have helped Oakland out quite a lot as well.
"There is more worth loving than we have strength to love." - Brian Jay Stanley
Mountains with "complicated geology", which means very expensive tunneling.
Ideally, the land in between the cities will be flat, low population density land: ie, low construction costs, and low right of way costs. France Paris to Lyon has that. Japan was still rebuilding from WW2, and built not far from the coast. HSR doesn't have many good routes in the world. The NE USA has the population, but it has expensive land. China had the population density, and low construction costs to overcome hills.
I'll take our freight rail system, which moves lots of heavy stuff around. Yeah, go and have a single train carrying a couple hundred people around. I'll take a train moving several thousand tons of cargo at a time. I'll take the bus or airplane instead.
So how many billions were spent to 'rocket' people between Bakersfield & Merced, California?
Who will pay to shuttle between those two locations, let alone pay a premium to do it 'high-speed'?
Ken
I don't know if you realize it, but your slashdot uid is racist. Please change it.
As a replacement, how about an autonomous-only limited-access highway? 100 mph, autonomous cars only, on ramps and exits only at major cities. Much lower construction cost than rail.
2008's Prop 1A passed with an almost a 50/50 split.
It was controversial at that time, with the main argument against the project being that our state bureaucracy would piss away the money and be unable to complete it. It is an unethical project in that it benefited only coastal Californians, but takes money from Public Works which could otherwise be spent on repairing bridges and dams. Several bridges throughout have been closed for decades because the state never got around to rebuilding them, forcing rural travelers to commute longer distances and trucks to wear out roads on dangerous mountain routes.
Did gov. Newsome really brag that he's going to piss away snother $3.5BN in federal money on a train from nowhere to nowhere because he's opposed to giving it back to/not taking it from "Trump"?
Ken
Now, I really love aviation, I'm a frustrated pilot that never got his wings, I love flying a little nothing that's made of sticks and rags, but... we absolutely need hi-speed rail in the US. Maybe not so much in tightly-packed metro areas, but it sure as hell can work long-distance.
But as long as the Airplane (and to some extent Car) manufacturers have any influence, rail is a non-starter.
The "Civilized World" jumped the shark ca. 1973.
Autonomous electric flight is coming, is vastly more responsive and flexible, delivers people closer to their desired destinations and requires very little infrastructure or land. High speed rail can only fail given that near-to-market competition.
Three words: Interstate Highway System.
It's not the lack of Chinese authoritarianism that's preventing us from making it work. It's our inability to align all our interests and resources to make it happen.
Back in 1956, we passed something called the National Interstate and Defense Highways Act. In 35 years, we constructed over 48,000 miles of dedicated highway, three times as much Chinese high speed rail in only double the time. How did it all come together? Simple: the threat of war. Eisenhower was inspired by the national highway system of Germany and how it served as vital military infrastructure for them during World War II. Investing in that infrastructure for the homeland would be a strategic military asset in case of invasion. So far, it's yet to be used that way, but it's contributed tremendous returns to our nation's GDP.
The only thing preventing us from making it happen is a lack of will.
19% of income and yet 50% of wealth. It's almost as if a lot of them are only paying capital gain taxes.
Got any numbers/examples to back that up that 100% tax rate?
PS - I don't necessarily agree with a 90% tax rate or that it'd be effective, but your inteptocracy argument is stupid. People can't magically be paid more money than companies are willing to pay and those that pay less have the competitive advantage to make more mistakes. Couple that with automation shifting the vast majority of people into lower paying service jobs, and you have a situation where in many locations you simply cannot as a group better your position. Oh, and all that automation is there precisely to feed the "inept". Get rid of their ability to consume those things and many those factories will collapse from multiple boom/bust cycles being able to produce the proper amount of goods.
You are confusing wealth with income. Most people become very wealthy when their investments, such as stocks, increase in value. While shares can provide yearly income in the form of dividends payed out by the company, the majority of the value resides in the shares themselves. Until the shares are sold it is not considered income nor does it get taxed, even then, if has been held for more then a year it only gets taxed at the max capital gain rate of %20. Amazon has never paid a dividend so if Bezo's didn't sell any shares (and ignoring other sources) his income would be just his salary of $82.000.
So, um, where did the money go?
Oliver's law of assumed responsibility: If you're seen fixing it, you will be blamed for breaking it.
California have it in their grasp to be able to put in a TRUE high-speed with hyperloop. It would bring jobs, provide the fastest land transportation, and yet, these idiots are playing within tinker toys from other nations.
What a bunch of maroons.
I prefer the "u" in honour as it seems to be missing these days.
That git climbed out of his bog. .
No new technology is required. All they have to do is define and grade a right-of-way, acquire strips of land where needed, and order existing components made in Europe and Asia. Land csots could be mitigated by using existing routes like the broad median of I-5 in rural areas.
If Democrats can't reclaim the spirit of Franklin Roosevelt and finish this project, they can't finish anything.
Almonds are such a mainstay.
Which makes sense since it was supposed to finance a small percentage of the full project, not a bigger percentage of a scaled back project.
From http://nymag.com/intelligencer...
"The San Joaquin segment was supposed to be finished by 2022, and the whole enchilada by 2029. But it’s not looking good, and if that first deadline is missed, the state could be exposed to the clawback of up to 3.5 billion in federal funds awarded the project in 2010 as part of the Obama administration’s economic stimulus program."
Here are the facts:
Paris to Marseille is a 482 mile drive, compared to 479 miles to Liechtenstein. Today I can buy a Ouigo TGV ticket for 35 euros that will take me from Paris to Marseille in 3h21min.
For comparison:
Compared to the developed world the US is doing poorly in this regard. We have no excuse for these failures other than incompetence and corruption.
(1) Let the corrupt US contractors build from Merced to Bakersfield. (2) Use existing tracks from Oakland to Merced. Electrify them. Extend from Emeryville across the Bay Bridge to a terminal in SF. (3) Hire a French, Japanese, or Chinese company to build from Bakersfield to LA Union Station. They know what they're doing as far as high-speed rail and will get it done at 1/4 the cost of "buying American."
While it makes sense in a few niche cases, rail/subway public transport is a technology who's time has come and gone. It requires too large of a footprint, is too complicated to administer, and to expensive to maintain. The future is going to be more fluid and decentralized transport, something like driverless bus and large vans tied to some kind of automated route management system. Think of something like Lyft/Uber, only with driverless vehicles of various sizes and MUCH more prevalent. A transportation system that costs tens of millions per mile with stations that run into the tens/hundreds of millions of dollars each has no chance on even footing with a system that costs tens of thousands of dollars per vehicle and has no stations necessary.
If China made less money would cruelty decrease or increase ? Can we effectively demand more civil liberties in China by threatening loss of trade with the US? And although communism sucks can anyone name a time in which any other form of government in China has been better than communism ? Vietnam is now far better off as a communist nation than it ever was under different kinds of government. In the US we are not supposed to notice these things. But can it be that in certain places under certain conditions that communism is the best real choice for a nation?
> why on earth the project is not a multi-state and multi-nation venture
Because other states and countries don't want to waste billions and billions of dollars on something that isn't working?
The USA needs WAR to get them to pay for anything. I should have figured that the highway system was a form of military spending.
Democracy Now! - uncensored, anti-establishment news
By your standard of rail being 1800s technology, wheels on roads are 10th century B.C. technology. The neat thing about rail is that it stays on the "road" at 150 mph or more, regardless of weather conditions. It's also easy to power electrically, since steel rails provide a current return path with no worries about charging batteries or maintaining them.
The ideal system would actually be a hybrid of your system and rail -- driverless vehicles to bring passengers to stations, where shorter (2 or 3 car) driverless trains would run frequently between stations. Low-speed buses for shorter trips, higher-speed rail for longer hauls. Trains should be long enough to have a bathroom, some food service, ability to get up and walk around between stations, etc.
I understand what the total cost has increased to but how much money is going to be thrown down the hold on the Merced to Bakersfield boondoggle just to finish it?
My sister lives in Bakersfield and there is absolutely zero reason she would want to take that stupid train to any city between Bakersfield and Merced.
What's worse is the stupid California voters voted for this thing (yes, I know they only allowed 10B).
You're a worthless blabbering faggot who knows nothing, why are you blabbering lol inbred nothing?
But if you aren't, well, you should relocate, because Rail is Great!
Wisconsin, when it was last under all-Democrat control (like California), tried to do "kind of high speed" rail, connecting not-quite-Milwaukee to within sight of the Capital building in Madison (routed over mostly-disused freight tracks) to not-quite-St. Paul. Why? Because there was federal money available, and HSR was all the rage with people important to the Democratic Party.
It wasn't practical, it wouldn't even move as fast as cars driving the shorter route, but federal money was available. And it was HSR, after all, so long as you defined "high speed" as 50-60 MPH between stations. (Commuter trains in the Chicago area move faster.)
Fortunately it got stopped before $millions became $billions. California isn't so much stopping as deciding to spend as much as they can, even if it is useless.
I didn't think I'd EVER see it.
A "public works" project like this, where they pull back "because they're spending too much".
I think the GND kinda shat in their cornflakes.
It either shook some sense into them (unlikely, I know) or they're now living in mortal terror of the backlash on the "rail to everywhere" idiocy in the proposal.
Chas - The one, the only.
THANK GOD!!!
I'm from Fresno (left a few years ago for Bay Area), about half-way between Merced/Bakersfield. My whole life the only times I've been in Bakersfield or Merced was to get gas/food on my way south to LA or north to Sacramento. There will be few riders on this rail line. The whole line is 160 miles - that's less than 3 hours travel time by car end to end. Fresno to Bakersfield is 2 hours MAX by car. Even students at UC Merced or CSU,Bakersfield are likely to just drive. A much better line in Northern CA would have been Sacramento (or Stockton) to Bay Area (SF, San Jose, etc) I know many folks commuting from Stockton/Sacramento to Bay Area - the lucky ones only show up 1-2 days in Bay Area and rent rooms/Air BnB, some unlucky souls do it every day.
so everyone profited from this by now and its time to bury it uh?
California is the most corrupt state in the US. It's really bad.
In your whole life you've never managed any project. Not a complex project or a super complex project like the rail. You know nothing. Lol.
Low information voters are usually too stupid to show up for anything except the Presidential elections. Luckily the President doesn't wield much economic power, he's simply the figure head of the ignorance masses.
Gotta get them gaffot artists, nibberizing ghetto-sluts and wettback invaders on-the-dole. Inept ? Wasteful !! Not for the Rawlsian tit-$ucker$ .
Here's what's going to happen. Merced-Bakersfield is going to get built -- too much money invested in the project. This route will be connected to Oakland via existing tracks used by Amtrak between Merced and Bakersfield. These tracks will be electrified to allow running of HSR trains between Oakland/Berkeley/Emeryville and Bakersfield. Meanwhile they'll be electrifying the existing Metrolink line to Lancaster as far north as Santa Clarita and hiring a Chinese consortium to build from Santa Clarita to Bakersfield via the median of I-5.
Poor people don't provide jobs. When the US was recovering from the Great Depression the government created thousands of public works projects to get people working. FDR met with the 5 wealthiest industrialist at the time and convinced them to change their business operations from a demand economy to a supply economy.
Caltrain still got money for their improvements, so Pelosi doesn't care.
"First they came for the slanderers and i said nothing."
Your supporting points don't actually support your thesis statement. Economic power != income.
Corruption is convincing someone that the selfless ideal is the same as their selfish ideal.
This is just posturing and political chess.
The governor is hoping this will put an end to the seemingly intractable squabbling among San Jose's leaders by causing them to panic & rapidly coalesce behind a station location and route to connect Caltrain to Merced.
Once that's done, the governor will announce a deal with Virgin Trains whereby California builds the tracks connecting Caltrain @ SJ to Merced, while Virgin procures its own trains, builds the stations, and operates them along existing tracks into LA and SF at current speeds, and runs along the new tracks at high speed. By offloading the station construction and rolling stock onto Virgin, and initially scrapping the service to Sacramento and San Diego, CalHSR's official cost will be reduced to something that the plurality of Californians who live in LA or the Bay Area can stomach.
Virgin will limp at 50-79mph from Union Station to northeastern LA, 110mph to Bakersfield, 150-225mph between Bakersfield and Merced, and Merced and San Jose, then jog at 79-110mph along Caltrain's tracks into SF itself.
The HUGE battle will come 15-20 years from now, when there's public demand to improve the last 50 miles into LA, the last ~80 miles into SF, extend the route to San Diego, and extend the route to Sacramento... but not enough money to do all of them. My guess is that the tracks into L.A. Union Station will "mostly" get upgraded to allow 79-110mph all the way through the city, lots of band-aids will get applied to the existing tracks between San Diego and LA to allow 79-110mph, and HSR from Modesto to a station at the outskirts of Sacramento (with plans to someday finish it as HSR all the way to within a few blocks of the Capitol that will never actually happen unless the state manages to acquire and preserve the corridor BEFORE so many years and so much new development has occurred, the whole thing would have to go in a bored tunnel and be UNFATHOMABLY expensive), but nothing will ever solve the Bay Area's NIMBY problem enough to permit 180+mph all the way into SF.
The remaining route is pointless. There isn't a lot of commuter traffic between the two endpoints (Merced and Bakersfield). The majority of traffic along that axis is between Los Angeles metro and the SF Bay area. To use the remaining planned rail for that route, you'd have three about-equal-distance segments: drive from LA to Bakersfield, train from Bakersfield to Merced, then drive from Merced to SF. As a time reduction, the rail's benefit would be negligible, since the traffic it would be bypassing would be reasonably free-flowing rural, not freeway-as-parking-lot urban.
I'm generally not a fan of government rail projects, but if they're going to build it, they should at least build it where it will do some good. A line running from the Sacramento metro to the nearest outlying BART station (SF's metro rail, for those unfamiliar) would actually be useful and probably reduce a lot of commuter traffic. It would also be much shorter: about 60 miles from downtown Sacramento to the outlying BART stations, as compared to 110. As for the Merced-Bakersfield line, they should just admit that their sunk costs are sunk, and ditch it.
"The Greens lynched a hacker in Chicago. Last month, but I think the body's still hanging from the old Water Tower."
The water comes from a river on the border of Nevada. California doesn't have to share if it is no longer a state.
Everything is racist. Deal with it.
Government contracts are indeed supposed to be an endless trough of money - from the taxpayers, to the people who've made campaign contributions to the officials responsible for the contracts.
Google for:
"cost-plus contracts" (a fave of defense contactors who get higher profits when they under-deliver and delay their projects)
"Space Launch System" (The NASA rocket to replace the shuttles, which will replace the shuttles that were designed in 10 years with a "shuttle-derived" rocket that will have taken over $20 Billion and 20 years to develop before carrying people for the first time)
"federal government Y2K" (the program to make sure government IT systems would be ready for the roll-over to the year 2000 --- a program Trump finally ended after getting elected in 2016)
The evidence is endless, and it's all up to corruption and campaign cash. Notice that Gavin newsom is NOT actually cancelling the program and stopping the expenditure of cash; he's just de-scoping it while keeping work going so that he basically makes it so nobody will hold him to account when the train spends all the money yet does not reach its original endpoints --- quite a bold stroke of hubris.
“No government ever voluntarily reduces itself in size. Government programs, once launched, never disappear. Actually, a government bureau is the nearest thing to eternal life we'll ever see on this earth!” - President Ronald Reagan
How much do you want to bet that "little oversight" is complete BS and the real problem that caused the huge increase in cost was from adding more and more layers of management/oversight? With the ratio of management to employees capable of building a railway line getting worse and worse as management/oversight sucked up the biggest salaries they could.
Obama lowered the seas and helped the earth!
Don't worry though, The Party in California (AKA the Democrats in this effectively one-party-state) will roll out its next Five Year Plan at the next party meeting, and they'll again talk about re-education camps and prisons for those who disagree (our former state AG, now our junior US Senator Kamala Harris who just announced she is running for President in 2020 proposed jailing people in CA who disagreed with her views on global warming, and the Democrats made it illegal to teach honestly about homosexuality in California schools in a law they wrote in 2000).
Magnitsky? Seriously? So you think Trump has illegally adopted a Russian child or personally water boarded someone on behalf of Russia?
Wtf are you smoking? /. has always been full of crazed idiots but you win todays blue ribbon for insanity. You beat the ken troll, the entire tds crowd and all the AGW Marxists.
Alexandria Occluded Cortex's plan also calls for ending coal, without which you cannot make steel, without which you cannot make railroad tracks..... so YES the idiots behind "The Green New Deal" want the trains, but NO they are so stupid and ill-informed that they do not even know that some elements of their "deal" make other elements impossible.
AOC is what you get when you decide that teaching kids to have confidence and high self esteem is more important than teaching them objective facts and how thigs work. There's another group who have very high self esteem: psychopaths.
So california builds roads at around $420k / mile (a mere 2.5x the national average spend of $160k per mile) [https://www.politifact.com/california/statements/2017/nov/01/john-cox/does-california-spend-nearly-five-times-much-build/].
The "high speed" rail project cost $77B for 800 miles. Or a mere $96M / mile. By california public works inefficiency standards this was still a great deal!
So now it's killed who wants to bet that 10% or $8B of that money now goes to Elon Musk's Boring Company? An awesome deal by CA standards.
Of course they course just build more road for driverless cars, but that's not as fun as an evacuated tunnel in earthquake country. And besides what's the point of public transport except to take you from a place you don't want to be to another place you don't to be.
Viva la revolucion !!
Except that California is one of the wealthiest states with the highest wages, where as the poorer ones where most people are making under $50k are the ones that vote Republican, i.e. for tax and benefit cuts.
const int one = 65536; (Silvermoon, Texture.cs)
SJW, n: "Someone I don't like, and by the way I'm a fuckwit" - AC
And look what happened as a consequence - the Germans bombed Pearl Harbor and homosexuality became compulsory!
Froth froth gilded age froth froth free market chunter chunter.
Confucius say, "Find worm in apple - bad. Find half a worm - worse."
You probably meant "flouted", not "flaunted".
But when I say "fucktard", like I'm doing right now, that's exactly what I mean.
Confucius say, "Find worm in apple - bad. Find half a worm - worse."
What?
He seems to know how to get shit done for half the budget of the Democrats.
When you calculate that wage value, does it include all the pension plans that CA has no way of paying for and willfully ignores on a daily basis?
The idea that the 1% has all the power is a myth. The IRS tax stats are freely available for anyone to see and analyze. The 1% (everyone making approx $500k per year or more) only accounts for 19% of total income in the U.S. The vast majority of economic power in the U.S. (64% of all income) rests with those making $50k-$500k per year.
Who care about income? Wealth is where the power is.
The top 1% in net worth in the U.S. hold 40% of the nation's wealth. The bottom 50% in net worth of the U.S. population combined hold 1% of the nation's wealth.
Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... (First paragraph and first chart.)
Help! I'm a slashdot refugee.
I live in California. Have for most of my life. You clearly have not and have no idea wtf you are talking about.
You cant talk about averages in a state with such extremes. Sure the average income is whatever. The median is not. We have the ultra wealthy Silicon Valley balancing out what is really a VERY poor state. If you are not in tech you are quite likely piss poor. I always wondered why the poor and lower middle classes struggle to stay here. It really sucks in California if you arenâ(TM)t on the way higher end of average. If you are at the median you are working really hard to stay poor and getting poorer.
If the whole country was like California then this country would be no different than some medieval kingdom of lords and peasants.
rail/subway public transport is a technology who's time has come and gone. It requires too large of a footprint
Do you even know what a subway is? It is under the ground - footprint zero. As for surface rail, it requires a far smaller footprint than equivalent road. Each London Underground track for example can carry the equivalent of a three lane motorway, comparing both at full capapcity.
Based on 2107 numbers, if you confiscate all wealth of all 400, you would pick up $2.7 trillion, enough to run the US government for about two-thirds of one year.
Once.
Of course, there's the issue that virtually all of that wealth is in equities, which would have to be sold to covert to spendable dollars, and who are you going to sell $2T of stock to once you've just confiscated 100% of the wealth from the people who could afford to buy it?
And the various levels of state and local governments there seem hell-bent on running in that direction as fast as they can.
California is going bankrupt. I knew this thing was doomed to failure right from the beginning and have called it out on here many times only to be ridiculed by these big project rail supporters.
Doesn't really bode well for the Green New Deal now does it?
These projects should not be partisan, this has nothing to do with politics.
You guys need state of the art infrastructure, why are countries in the far East (not only China) able to build top transportation infrastructure,
while the US lets its own stuff crumble?
Come on guys!
How does Amazon stock valuation lower the wealth of the poor?
Can't wait to see you begging in the streets for scraps of food.
Anonymous comments are as pathetic as the anonymous "sources" that contaminate gutless journalism from the New York Time
The problem with your argument is that it fails to take into account marginal tax rates. While I agree with your point of view - there is a lot of overlap between our world views here - the facts are that you are confusing effective tax rates with top marginal tax rates. A 90% top marginal rate on income over $1M means that the lower brackets apply to the first $X of income. That 90% only kicks in against money after the first $1M. So if total taxable income is $1,000,001, that 90% marginal rate only applies to that single dollar.
Regardless, though, your argument is reinforced by this - it will pull in even less money than your argument referenced a few posts ago.
Most people become very wealthy when their investments, such as stocks, increase in value.
Where I live, Silicon Valley, many people get pretty wealthy because their house appreciated in value. "Pretty wealthy" in this context means fully owning an asset worth over $1 million. For a lot of people, this seems to be their retirement plan: retire, sell the house, and move somewhere where housing prices are vaguely sane.
I don't have any numbers to back that intuition. Do you know of any studies showing the net wealth of American households and what assets that wealth is in? I'd be curious to understand better.
If you wait until you're done before you start, then you'll never start.
The top 1% paid 37.2% of federal taxes. Do we really want to fuck them over?
Except that California is one of the wealthiest states with the highest wages.
I'll have to look this up but California, being so large, is a microcosm of the entire US. We have rich, liberal areas. We have poor, bright red areas. We have everything in between.
The state tends to seem bright blue and that's not wrong. There are enough urban elite liberals that they dominate state politics. But don't believe that means the entire state feels that way.
The wealthy elite like to keep their liberal poor folk nearby (not in the same neighborhood of course, but in the same voting districts), so they can make sure they do what they are told.
Can I get my $ back?
I didn't make an argument a few posts ago I just responded to your request for proof of 100% rates. Nor am I confusing effective rate with marginal rates. A hypothetical federal marginal rate of 90% on income over $1M plus a current state marginal rate of 13.3% on income over $1M means a combined marginal rate of over 100% on income over $1M.
The overall effective rate actually approaches 100%, the higher the income is (assuming 100% on income over $1M). E.g., even if we assume a 0% rate for all income below $1M and your $1M + 1 example indeed means that 100% only applies to the last dollar producing an effective rate of 0.09%. But an income of $2M would have effective rate of 50%, $3M would be 66%, $4M would be 75%, $5M would be 80%, $10M would be 90%, $20M would be 95%, $50M would be 98%, $100M would be 99%...
We do have a robust passenger rail service in the one section of the country that has sufficient density to support it (Washington DC - NYC Corridor). Even then, with tickets ranging up into the hundreds, a lot of folks still opt to drive or take buses instead. The rest of the country simply lacks the density and has such large geographical space that rail just doesn't make sense - instead, we use our robust air travel network to support it instead. So let's say you want to go from NYC to Atlanta, about 900 miles and assume you have sufficient traffic to justify building the track (which is a big if). Even a high speed rail, going at 150 mph, would take a good six hours when you could just fly for two. That six hours also assumes you've got a direct train and one that isn't slowing down and stopping in Philadelphia, Baltimore, DC, Richmond, and Charlotte on the way down. Also, can you imagine the cost of trying to eminent domain the land through all those major cities to build upgraded track? Not just buying it, but the environmental studies and lawsuits that will take place?
No, I don't mean Newsom's top line rhetoric. I mean what are the actual changes that are being made to the project?
Is funding being cut? No.
Are any of the construction and land acquisition activities being planned over the next several years being changed? No.
Is the current route under construction, and due to be built over the next decade going to be changed in any way? No.
Newsom announced that the $28 billion or so currently appropriated to build a line south from San Francisco as far as Bakersfield will continue as planned, and all of the environmental and land acquisition planning for the route south from Bakersfield to LA will continue unchanged.
So what did Newsom actually declare? That he is not, at the moment, willing to rhetorically support the eventual goal of reaching LA - although it will not require changing any decisions for at least his first full term of office, and probably his second, if he is re-elected. But everything is proceeding as before.
Starships were meant to fly, Hands up and touch the sky - Nicky Minaj
Yea, anyone with any sense would start with some form of 'personalized rapid transit' nowadays. The only complicating factor is existing investment legacy systems; I could see older cities concluding they should stick with subways/trains for awhile.
That said, this train seems more like a new project than an expansion project. The planners here blew it
(and yes, PRT has been know for decades)
The bottom 50% hold some negative % of the nation's wealth. Being net debtors and instant gratification, shiny loving morons. Sucks to be them, don't.
John McAfee 'It was like that time I hired that Bangkok prostitute; to do my taxes, while I fucked my accountant'
What a GREAT deal.. move to a cold frozen nowhere to retire.. just what every old person wants.. cold & shitty!
Public projects can be very good things. See the original interstate highway project or the NYC subway (long before it was left in disrepair). But the people running these projects NEED to be on the up-and-up. They need to manage those projects well, avoid delays and cost overruns, and be transparent about everything. This rail project in California would have been good for the state. But it was mismanaged from the start. And now we will end up with a small single route which is not needed nearly as much as a LA-SF route.
California has had other problems recently, like DMV and Covered CA, the state's Obamacare exchange. I had so many problems with Covered CA not sending me the tax form in 2016 which is required by federal law. I called them time and time again, only to talk to f*cking morons who blamed everyone except Covered CA for the problem. I even waited on hold 45 minutes to talk to someone at Covered CA who argued with me. When I asked to speak with her supervisor, she f*cking hung up on me! I finally did receive the tax form from Covered CA on May 2, 2016, after taxes were already due. (I had to file for a tax extension that year since I could not fill in the values from that form.) And no letter of apology or even an acknowledgement from Covered CA that this form was sent so late. So I called them once again. It turned out it WAS Covered CA's fault all along. California is a great state. But they seriously need to get a handle on their public works.
It was 90% less than 100 years ago. Sounds like a shithole country run by the 1%.. Africa? Is that you??
So not even the wealthiest and most leftist state can figure out how to build a train to go 500 miles? I support these projects, but these guys have lost their minds.
I find delicious irony in someone speaking sanctimoniously about "facts" in a discussion about tax legislation based on the idea of trickle down economics, and that slashing taxes for corporations results in higher wages for employees. What do they call that again? Voodoo economics? Have a great one, champ!
Sorry but 100% is still not possible. You do realize that federal taxes deduct any state taxes paid from you income, so you are only federally taxes on you post-state-tax income. Same thing with social security and Medicare taxes.
2018 called. It wanted to let you know about record wage increases, and also called you a faggot.
None of the arguments cited thus far are significant. The only thing matters is that the military-industrial complex wants Boeing up and trains down, because aviation is considered important for warfare while railways not so much since the end of WW2. Factor in that conflict is brewing, the world is re-arming, the era of continous peace dividend seen since Clinton-Gore is ending.
In contrast, climate change is accelerating. The insane amount of fossil-fueled air and road traffic between SF-LA could be single-handedly decimated by electrified HST service that can be run on wind, photo-voltaics, hydro, nuclear or hi-efficiency fossil co-generation.
Especially the case for aviation is pure insanity, the thermal efficiency of even the most modern turbofan engines is just 38%, easily half of what's achieved in a gas turbine - > steam turbine -> hot water recirculating stationary electric power plant that could power HST even without renewables. Observed from other aspect, flying in an airliner uses the same amount of fuel for one person that riding a compact car with 4 guys in it uses. (Note that jet fuel is just a fancier grade of diesel.)
Factor in that aviation spews the CO2, NOx, soot, etc. exhaust at FL350 (10-11km high up) not at the ground level, which means the warming forcing contribution is 2.7-4 times higher. Essentially aviation industry is the butcher of climate, yet they are exempt from all regulation and don't even pay taxes on fuel. They give you the thundering noise and the body cavity check but noone dare to reign them in.
If electrified true HST existed between SF-LA, city center to city center, aviation industry would lose 90% of that route and the natural environment would win a reprive. (Spain essentially ceased domestic aviation after their TAV network was built.) That cannot happen for the sake of Boeing and the military-industrial complex, Earth be damned. If and when AGW becomes too bad, they will make a nuclear war to cool the planet and to get rid of ~ 5 billion "uncool" people. Glitch is no one can be sure where he/she or their kids will be counted...
Countries that think long-term are building railway electrification, e.g. Japan, EU, Russia, China, India, even the Saudi brutes. (BTW, did you know much ridiculed India has always been a world leader in the 25kV AC traction system, they stared using it already in the late 1950s?) In contrast the USA is a young country who doesn't intend to live long as americans are awaiting the delusional "rapture" or imminent End of Times thus they don't care much about the future, but profit and self-individualism. The deluge behind them...
SF to LA is ridiculously simple and easy from an engineering point of view, just put the area under FEMA exceptional rules, e.g. words liberty, property banned, lawyers shot on sight, internment camps for NIMBY. Then call in the french or the japanese railway industry, let them do the construction and in three years the bullet trains will be running. When there is a will there is a way.
(As a bonus you will get the gist of a true national power grid, because be suprised to learn that the USA actually doesn't even have a national electric grid to this day, it consists of isolated supply islands, which causes huge inefficiencies.)
What's the problem with gerrymandering? It splits up the population and demographics in ways that aren't representative, right?
Now, what's the problem with analyzing the population by splitting them up based on state boundaries?
I'm sure you're smart enough to see where I'm going with this, but then, you already knew that you were lying when you typed out your post in the first place.
As smart as slashdotters think they are it constantly surprises me that they won't apply critical thinking to your posts.
"But, anonymous coward," you say, "I'm not a liar, you're just dumb!"
Nay! You are lying!
The population of each state is not composed of a single political party. For example, about 90% of African Americans vote Democrat and are, unfortunately, also over-represented among the economically disadvantaged in our country and therefore they are also over-represented among those who are on government assistance programs. And which states hold the majority of African Americans? The deep south; hardly a bastion of Democrat power! But how can this be?! Because demographics. The same holds true of Latin Americans and illegal immigrants. Can you think of some reasons why that might throw off your numbers a little bit concerning which states pay in how much compared to what they take out?
Nor is the economy of each state instantly responsive to the economic policies of whichever party currently controls that state's government. There is significant lag between the two because it can take several decades for a dramatic economic shift to occur. For example: the educated tech sector is a large portion of the economic strength in the Pacific Northwest. Amazon is moving some of their offices out. But not all. So for the time being they still bring in a lot of tax money, but whatever state Amazon starts building new warehouses and offices in gets a boon. And over time perhaps Amazon will leave the Northwest (i.e. because of taxes) and move the bulk of their company elsewhere. But this won't happen overnight will it?
There are other reasons why what you said is flat out wrong (at best), but the point is that the situation is slightly more complicated than a fool might assume by a glance at a map of how the electoral college went in the last election.
But you knew that, didn't you? You're quick to point out science and statistics and all the nuances of critical thinking when it comes to climate change and other topics of interest to you. But for some reason, AmiMoJo, your ideology blinds you when it comes to other people's money. Why is that?
Wealth...
You mean, like stocks? In companies? That employ people?
That's the vast majority of 'wealth' in the United States - non-liquid, and currently put to use for productive purposes. You know, like making sure you get your smartphone, internet, and tendies.
Did you think the rich people have vast vaults of gold coins they swim in, like Scrooge McDuck?
in the world (no, I'm not joking).
Do some research. The US rail system is amazingly efficient and well-run for freight which is what it's best for. There is no rail system on Earth that moves more cargo more efficiently over the diverse terrain etc with the same level of reliability (the US rail system for freight was optimized during WWII and has only improved over the decades since)..
The USA uses its rails to move cargo. We use cars and airplanes to move people, which is far more efficient if you consider the value of a man-hour. It's best for an economy to move human beings either very quickly over long distances (where aircraft beat trains quite easily) or precisely point-to-point and precisely when these fine-grained units of the economy need to be moved (where private passenger cars excel). The least-efficient way to move humans is to require them to go to one of a limited number of fixed-point terminals for slow travel on a rigid schedule (which is precisely the railroad model).
It all depends on how much value a society places on a man-hour. If a man-hour is valuable, cars and planes are used. If a man-hour is not valuable, trains are used.
Just because all the hip Europeans and Asians are fixated on somewhat fast trains (faster than cars but slower than planes) travelling between a few major cities, that does NOT mean the train is ideal for use in other situations (like the US) or that it is actually efficient. In many countries, these train systems are partly justified by politics and government policy, so efficiency is a lower priority. In the US the freight system is in private hands and thus very highly optimized, while the passenger service (Amtrak) is a quasi-government monopoly.
SALT is indeed one of the biggest wealth transfers from other states to places like California and New York. California in 2017 received more than $80 BILLION from the Feds for those credits alone - more than the entire budget of some states.
How many people live within a square mile in Beijing? How many per square mile in Shanghai?
Now, how many per sqaure mile in Bakersfield?
[facepalm]
If huge numbers of people do not live and work within a mile of the train station at each end of the route, then you have a loser that will be underutilized and need huge government subsidies. The case is even worse when you consider the nature of the populations. If a population consists of people who are patient and used to waiting in line, waiting for government to tell them what to do, where to go, when to go, and so forth then trains work better. The population of Californis is not exactly that population. People in California each want to go where they want to go, when they want to go, and they're used to ignoring the government. The average Californian is not going to choose to wait 5 minutes for a train when he/she can hop into a car and go.
More than 90% of America's land is not appropriate for mass transport. The 500 people in a Kansas town will never be able to use mass transit in place of cars and trucks. Same for people in Montana, Wyoming, Nebraska, most of Texas, and on and on and on. Very few places in the USA have the population density to justify any form of mass transit (Chicago, New York, Washington DC, San Francisco - basically a handful of big cities).
Someone missed the opportunity for a headline: "Newsom Shoots Bullet Train."
More seriously, the first high-speed rail line in the world, the TÅkaidÅ Shinkansen between Tokyo and Osaka, began operation in 1964. It runs approximately the distance between San Francisco and Los Angeles.
A good analytical piece on the history and problems of the California project comes from David Dayen; you can read it here: https://prospect.org/article/c.... Does anyone else feel like they're living in a technological backwater?
we'll give you an accurate number such as 98.1 so it apears real"
"And by the way, I am not interested in sending $3.5 billion in federal funding that was allocated to this project back to Donald Trump."
By the way, Gavin, you miserable prick, those are my tax dollars you've squandered. I hope President Trump pulls back every dollar the tax payers gave you for your latest disaster.
And, by the way folks, here is a perfect example of why the liberals' green new deal will be a disaster of epic proportions for the U.S. These idiots, these morons want to keep you from flying in preference to rail travel. What a sad joke!
Pedantic bullshit, blah, blah, blah....
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