TransitRider
Service Attendant
- Joined
- Sep 30, 2009
- Messages
- 107
Remember Amtrak is very expensive because they have high standards and the folks know how to run the train and they know what they are talking about.
I think they like to show the math you posted. It scares people that they may have to pay a pack of cigarettes or a six pack of beer for a stupid train that will be inaccessible to most of the state.Someone check my figures-According to infoplease.com, Louisiana's population last year was 4,410,796.
So if I figured it right, it would be $4.08 per person per year.
I'm not sure if that's unreasonable or not, but that would be per person, and since not everyone in each state pays taxes, then I would assume it would fall on the others that do pay taxes.
As I recollect, there were some very substantial infrastructure improvement costs associated with Baton Rouge to New Orleans train service. Apparently, an analysis was made, and it wasn't favorable to initiating such a service.Today's headline in the Baton Rouge, LA paper reads "Governor Turns Down Rail Route." In trying to establish rail service between Baton Rouge and New Orleans it seems as though everyone in Louisiana would like to see the service start except for our governor. The deadline for the Republican governor to apply to a Democratic administration for rail funding is today. Jindal's office is signaling that there will be no such move to ask for rail service. He is also the same Republican who turned down Stimulus millions. At present, we have a bus service, started after Katrina, that is usually packed to standing room only. The governor and his staff say they can't afford to subsidize a rail route for the citizens yet flies each and every Sunday in a state police helicopter to various Louisiana towns under the guise of "Sunday Worship." Louisiana politics hard at work...as usual.
Louisiana also has a different legal system then the rest of the US as they still use French civil law or Napoleanic Code while the rest of the US usese the English common law system.Louisiana's also unique in not having any counties--it has parishes instead :huh:Louisiana isnt a state either, its a state of mind!!!! :lol: :lol: :lol:
Was he actually in Iraq? Or was he perhaps in that very popular places for governors to be at ..... Argentina? :lol:BUT - in RI, the LT Governor I don't think would take over. And the President (or Governor in this case) usually makes a statement of who will be in charge during his absence - but this was not done at this time. (In fact nobody knew the Governor was away.) So nobody "took charge" during the storm - because they were waiting for "someone else" to authorize what needs to be done. (Such as plow roads or close schools!)
I know they've been talking about it for quite a while. I think I've even seen pictures from test runs of trains going through marshy areas between the two cities.I was unaware that Amtrak had completed a study of the New Orleans to Baton Rouge route, and had given an estimate on start-up and annual costs, yet the article says that the state can't afford the $18 million a year for the train.
But that's the population of the entire state working to pay for service that would only benefit/affect a relatively small portion. In the end, you can add and divide the costs various ways to come up with all sorts of different results, but until the money is actually laid on the table it doesn't mean much.According to infoplease.com, Louisiana's population last year was 4,410,796. So if I figured it right, it would be $4.08 per person per year.
My bad-that's why I said check my math, never been a strong point for me. I just tried to find a current population on Baton Rouge, I wasn't very successful. I expect the cost mantainance on the population between these cities would be very expensive. Remember all the complaints about NOL being mostly poor people after Katrina. If this is true, I certainly would not want to add more financial burdens to their existing problems. Sounds like Mr Jindal made a good decision, even though it probably won't be popular.I know they've been talking about it for quite a while. I think I've even seen pictures from test runs of trains going through marshy areas between the two cities.I was unaware that Amtrak had completed a study of the New Orleans to Baton Rouge route, and had given an estimate on start-up and annual costs, yet the article says that the state can't afford the $18 million a year for the train.
But that's the population of the entire state working to pay for service that would only benefit/affect a relatively small portion. In the end, you can add and divide the costs various ways to come up with all sorts of different results, but until the money is actually laid on the table it doesn't mean much.According to infoplease.com, Louisiana's population last year was 4,410,796. So if I figured it right, it would be $4.08 per person per year.
Louisiana, like many other states, is having to grapple with a dose of financial reality right now, and from what I see Jindal is doing a better job than most at bringing a sense of fiscal responsibility to the budgeting process. Louisiana has a long history of poor money management learned from squandering of boom times that have since petered out. Jindal's decision not to commit to an expense without a play for funding is reasonable, mature, and a breath of fresh air in the state long crippled by its populist governance.
In California the Lt Gov does, by law, take over when the Gov is out of the state. They are not elected on a ticket, but seperately. We currently have a R (RINO?) Gov and D Lt Gov.I know this is OT, but many things in politics do not make sense. In RI, we have a Governor and a Lt Governor. A few years ago, the Governor went to Iraq to visit local troops. During the weekend he was gone, RI had a major snowstorm. So of course the LT Governor took over, right? :huh:
WRONG! She is not second in command! (Actually it was the head of the Emergency Management Agency - but he did not know it, so it was a big mess that weekend!)
So why pay the $XXX,XXX salary for a position that has no power? :huh:
Actually Jindal's decision had nothing to do with common sense or any fiscal sense.Jindal's decision not to commit to an expense without a play for funding is reasonable, mature, and a breath of fresh air in the state long crippled by its populist governance.
George,Alan: I was writiong this before your post appeared. What I said is my opinion on the matter and was not written for the purpose of being contradictory. GH
I was deep in the cave finishing up Saturday's paper and found that in the very back pages that the parishes that the New Orleans to Baton Rouge train would run through were willing to put up their fair share of the operating costs. California is probably a lot broker than Louisiana will ever be (hopefully if our politicos behave themselves) and they voted a $10 million bond issue last year to extend service that they can't afford now. What gives?Just one more item. Today's (Saturday's) Baton Rouge Advocate's headline is "New York Firm With Ties To Jindal Gets Deal." For the life of me I'll never know why Louisiana politicians chose parties. All they would have to say is "I'm a Louisiana politician" and everyone would understand. Just ask our only four term governor, Edwin Edwards, who is still in the Federal pen in his mid-80's. Now I'll crawl back into my cave.
I can't pass this one upIf there was a (relatively) high-speed rail service between Baton Rouge and N'Ahrlins (or however the locals say it), would it be patronized by televangelist Jimmy Swaggart making trips to and from the "Big Easy" as he was noted for doing in the past—only this time by rail instead of in his own car?
Just to tie up a loose end that has been nagging me in my brain. I even had the right time frame.In California the Lt Gov does, by law, take over when the Gov is out of the state. They are not elected on a ticket, but seperately. We currently have a R (RINO?) Gov and D Lt Gov.
There is typically a type of gentleman's agreement that nothing be done while the gov is out of state, but not always.
I seem to remember in the late 70's or 80's that the Lt Gov signed some legislation the Gov would have vetoed. I think a lawsuit reulsted and it came down to when the Gov's plane reentered CA airspace. Sorry, can't remembe particulars.
Back to trains now.
A lot of those parishes are already broke, even if they don't know it.I was deep in the cave finishing up Saturday's paper and found that in the very back pages that the parishes that the New Orleans to Baton Rouge train would run through were willing to put up their fair share of the operating costs. California is probably a lot broker than Louisiana will ever be (hopefully if our politicos behave themselves) and they voted a $10 million bond issue last year to extend service that they can't afford now. What gives?
I wonder how La would be doing if this was taken away;A lot of those parishes are already broke, even if they don't know it.I was deep in the cave finishing up Saturday's paper and found that in the very back pages that the parishes that the New Orleans to Baton Rouge train would run through were willing to put up their fair share of the operating costs. California is probably a lot broker than Louisiana will ever be (hopefully if our politicos behave themselves) and they voted a $10 million bond issue last year to extend service that they can't afford now. What gives?
I have family working in some of them, doing accountancy work, and they tell me about the massive amount of red ink sitting just under the surface. The influx of Katrina evacuees has propped many of these parishes up, giving them a temporary image of growing economies, but leaving them saddled with long-term bills without any plan for paying them off.
So what happens when the parishes run out of money in a few years? Their promise to put up their fair share of operating costs won't be worth a whole lot when they're choosing between funding the train and funding police and schools.
This should be no surprise to anyone versed in Louisiana history and the stuff that goes on in the smaller parishes. Surely Jindal is aware of it, and aware that the state will be left holding the bag when they fail to pay their bills, so even their offer to pay a share of the cost isn't worth much. And again: there has been no legislative action to fund the rest of it, so even with the parishes chipping in the thing isn't paid for.
Louisiana under Jindal has shown more fiscal maturity than California, and we Louisianians (even we "Northern" Louisianians) should be glad for that.
:lol: :lol: :lol:Kentucky isn't a state.It depends upon the state's constitution, however, when most states wrote their Constitutions (with regards to executive branch) in a mirror to the US Constitution's treatment of the Presidency and Vice Presidency.Not always true. In Kentucky when the Governor leaves the state for whatever reason, the Lt Governor takes over and has all the powers of the top office.
And, we can have a democrat in one of the offices and a republican in the other. Doesn't happen often, but it has. When it does the Governor never leaves the state as the Lt Governor starts doing things the Governor doesn't want done!![]()
What is missing from this little sound bite is where it goes."Per dollar of federal tax collected in 2005, Louisiana citizens received approximately $1.78 in the way of federal spending. This ranks the state 4th highest nationally..." source Wikipedia Louisiana.