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United States News Title: A(nother) funny thing happened on the way to California’s bullet train paradise The new calculation takes into account a number of intractable problems encountered by the state rail agency. It raises profoundly difficult questions about how the state will complete what is considered the nations largest infrastructure project with the existing funding sources. The new estimate was presented Tuesday by Roy Hill, who leads the main consulting firm on the project, WSP (formerly Parson Brinckerhoff). Hill said the cost increases were mainly driven by problems including higher costs for land acquisition, issues in relocating utility systems, the need for safety barriers where the bullet trains would operate near freight lines and demands by stakeholders for the mitigation of myriad issues. The worst-case scenario has happened, Hill bluntly told the rail authoritys board at its regular monthly meeting. Assemblyman Jim Patterson demanded an audit last year, a demand that the rail authority denied. Patterson renewed his call for an independent audit to find out what happened to the money, and insisted that the administration of Gov. Jerry Brown explain what Plan B is: This is a major public works project that shows all the signs of a project in trouble, Patterson said Tuesday of the cost increases, delays and executive departures. The more we learn, the more troublesome the project appears. He said the state is way past the politics of high-speed rail, whether you think its a good idea, a bad idea or youre undecided. Since Central California is at the center of this right now, were the canary in the coal mine, the experiment. And the difficulties were experiencing will be nothing compared to going into Southern California, getting through the San Gabriel Mountains and those kinds of things. Patterson said he will speak at a joint legislative committee hearing on Jan. 30 to ask for an audit of the rail authority and the project. If this werent high-speed rail if it were a water treatment plant or an airport or a highway project, and saw large cost overruns, time delays, executives departing and internal fund transfers if you step back and look at it
these are symptoms of a project that is unwinding. This time the projects board is dispensing with the euphemisms, at least. One board member called the report horrifying yesterday, although the board tried gamely to claim that they now have a better handle on how to project costs. Californians have heard that more than once too, only to discover that it will now cost almost $11 billion just to move people between two Central Valley towns that have little demand to move back and forth that cant be handled by Highway 99. By the way, the board could hardly claim surprise at this estimate. Almost exactly a year earlier, the Federal Railroad Administration warned that Californias rail authority would come up about $3.6 billion short on this first leg of the bullet train. The board raised its estimate at that time by a smaller amount, and it turns out the FRA was a lot closer to the mark and still undershot it a bit with an estimate between $9.5-$10 billion. The solution to this debacle is pretty simple: put an end to the project before the state adds another debt crisis to its burgeoning pension crisis. The federal government could assist in that decision by cutting off all further federal funding for this Big Dig West. People who need to travel between Los Angeles and San Francisco can continue using the dozen or so airports and half-dozen airliners who routinely service the route, and the few people who really want to travel between Fresno and Merced can either use their own cars or take the Greyhound buses that run every two hours. That might embarrass Jerry Brown, but better that than further bankrupting California taxpayers for this entirely unnecessary and unrealistic boondoggle. Post Comment Private Reply Ignore Thread Top Page Up Full Thread Page Down Bottom/Latest
#1. To: All, Willie Green (#0)
Billions of cost overruns for the cheapest and easiest part of the route, to connect two shitholes, Fresno and Bakersfield. Of course, it will make it a little easier to travel from Fresno to the Bakersfield Olive Garden.
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