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If high-speed rail can’t make it in California, it can’t make it anywhere.
If high-speed rail can’t make it in California, it can’t make it anywhere. | City Journal
So in a nutshell, the project could not contain it's costs and went so far over budget it will be a miracle if the fed's don't do a criminal investigation to find out where the money went. The project ate up the budget with planning and engineering before a spike was driven. The proposal started with a (phase one) 9 billion dollar budget with a voter proposition that just barely passed in 2008.
Price tag (estimate to complete) at cancellation: 99 Billion.
The leg between Merced and Bakerfield is still being built. Rumor has it that leg was rushed so the state could get their hands on the federal money to help pad the general fund. The state will keep working on it, albeit slowly, to keep the fed's from clawing it back. So that money is firmly in the state government's furnace, it seems.
So much for the end of fossil fuels and other major government schemes that are "all wind and no rain". It was doomed by people being unable and unwilling to be engineered.
The project history...
California High-Speed Rail - Wikipedia
If high-speed rail can’t make it in California, it can’t make it anywhere. | City Journal
Perhaps the most critical national casualty may be the Green New Deal proposed by New York congresswoman Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez. Much of her platform for a ten-year transformation of the American economy centers on transportation. In her bid to kill the internal-combustion engine, Ocasio-Cortez apparently seeks to eliminate both cars and planes. Her favored solution for cross-continental travel: a massive network of high-speed trains.
Some of this must seem fanciful even to the democratic-socialist heartthrob from the Bronx. In contrast with Western Europe, where several high-speed rail lines operate, the United States has huge distances between cities; its average population density is generally lower than that of the European continent. Even on the California coast, a 450-mile high-speed rail trip from Los Angeles to San Francisco would have taken nearly four hours, compared with a one-hour plane ride. Imagine taking high-speed rail from Los Angeles to Chicago: a three-hour trip by plane becomes a 15-hour or longer trek across vast, empty spaces. During that time, the traveler would cover more high-speed rail mileage than the current length of the entire French system.
Even fervent supporters of the Green New Deal must recognize what California’s cancellation means: if high-speed rail is not feasible in the state with the three densest major metro areas in the nation, and the highest overall urban density, it is not feasible anywhere else in the United States.
So in a nutshell, the project could not contain it's costs and went so far over budget it will be a miracle if the fed's don't do a criminal investigation to find out where the money went. The project ate up the budget with planning and engineering before a spike was driven. The proposal started with a (phase one) 9 billion dollar budget with a voter proposition that just barely passed in 2008.
Price tag (estimate to complete) at cancellation: 99 Billion.
The leg between Merced and Bakerfield is still being built. Rumor has it that leg was rushed so the state could get their hands on the federal money to help pad the general fund. The state will keep working on it, albeit slowly, to keep the fed's from clawing it back. So that money is firmly in the state government's furnace, it seems.
So much for the end of fossil fuels and other major government schemes that are "all wind and no rain". It was doomed by people being unable and unwilling to be engineered.
The project history...
California High-Speed Rail - Wikipedia