Ryan
Court Jester
They don't complain because they seem to think that the road fairy just comes along and makes all the roads appear for free.
They don't complain because they seem to think that the road fairy just comes along and makes all the roads appear for free.
When it comes to Lists like this I tend to be from Missouri! If you include things like School and Property Taxes, Hospital and Community College and Fire and Water District(known as MUDs)and Insurance and Governement "Fees" on Everything! Id suggest that lots of Californias Cities, especially around the San Francisco Bay Area would be on the List along with Austin, Texas ( ), now the Most expensive Cty in Texas! Lest Jis and Dick feel left out, New Jersey should probably be on that List also! :lol: bet Penny, our Resient Tax-Attorney/Accountant will have Info on this! :help:Phoenix just built an entire 20 mile long light rail line without using an existing ROW. Yes, no doubt that's why their line cost more per mile than did The Tide. But still the point remains that already it costs less to move people by light rail. Yes, right now overall costs still show light rail as the most expensive, but it is rapidly making inroads on the bus numbers. Already as of 2010, it opened right at the very end of 2008 so it's first full year was 2009, it costs Phoenix taxpayers $1.96 for the average ride on light rail and $3.74 for the average ride on a bus.That is all fair. I think there's a secondary concern in a lot of areas...namely, that to get the same level of accessibility with rail that you have with buses, you need to put a lot more into the rail system for dedicated alignments. To take an example, the VRE uses a pre-existing alignment (in that case, the old RF&P Main, run by CSX, for the Fredericksburg line; and the NS main for the Manassas Line). However, to go beyond those lines and put a VRE line in somewhere else would be far more expensive (witness the Silver Line). In Norfolk, while The Tide was able to more or less take advantage of an existing alignment and some workable space (as I understand it), there are plenty of places that you simply can't get a line going without removing lanes on highways or knocking through neighborhoods.
None of this is to suggest that buses should just be tossed away. That's not practical either. The key is to have a balanced system with buses feeding rail options. This is the only, and best way, to keep the overall costs to taxpayers low.
The numbers supplied include all expenses without regard to where the money came from to pay said expenses.Also, on SLC, how much was supplemented by federal funding (or is that included there)? In most cases, local (and state) governments simply can't fork over the full tab for a rail line (in fact, absent meeting the criteria for federal funding, it's bluntly stated that nothing will be happening on the Peninsula).* Part of that could be, perhaps, chalked up to an unwillingness to raise taxes below the federal level...but I will note that if I was faced with New York City-level taxes (for example, though those are probably the most egregious ones I can think of), I would be seriously looking at moving elsewhere.
*I'll avoid a lengthy rant and just say that there's something to be criticized in the form of how many things states simply can't afford without federal funding.
By the way, while I suspect that my taxes here in NYC are greater than your's, NYC isn't the worst. In fact, it's not even in the top 10 for most "egregious" tax rates, per this list.
There are a lot more points served by the HSR than SF and LA. There are such places as Fresno and Bakersfield, plus there will be "local" trains that hit such places as Hanford, Palmdale, Gilroy, etc. And, I suspect the 89 billion would be full system build out which is a lot more than SF to LA.The high speed rail funding....9.95 billion allocated to California for the first part of a 89 billion dollar railway. That 9.95 billion is enough to buy 66 million..MILLION one way $150 tickets between San Fran and LAX. That's enough to send 3000 people a day one way on the route for the next 60 years....by air.
You could make that comparison, but I doubt that you'd find many people to agree with it. All 20,000+ miles of my Amtrak experience have been considerably better.As far as upgraded service, I could easily compare a typical Amtrak experience to a nice day at the DOT or IRS office. you can be greeted with a smile, but that's about it. Spartan is the key word. I love riding the rails. But I tolerate many of the shortcomings because of it.
Those people aren't the target market for Amtrak.I simply argue that the current business model for Amtrak is doomed to mediocrity. There is no way I can see Amtrak empowered to make onboard/equipment changes necessary on most long haul service to appeal to the income movers who don't even blink over $1500 per person cruise fares/$750 air fares/$300 night hotel stays or $50 per person steaks.
Really? In this economy? Those people are a fraction of the 1%, if that.There are many, many of those people.
And there won't be that kind of service at those prices.They are not, however, stupid, uninformed or lacking in some insight. You give them the choice of a $300 per person rail trip from Longview, TX to Denver colorado over a $450 per person airfare...and guess what? They'll choose rail if it is at the right price.
Repeat after me: "Amtrak is not a cruise line". Taxpayers aren't in this to subsidize a land cruise. You're going to complain about the government taking money to provide telecommunications services for the poor, but expect the government to pick up the tab so some 1%er can have a land cruise? I don't think so. Think that the service can pay for itself? The graveyard of companies that tried it before and went out of business tend to indicate otherwise.Cruise ships make a living doing this....but they cannot do it under the constraints of high priced US labor laws. They pack value into a resort/dining/entertainment combination. I say that you can blend an efficient long distance transportation system combined with a resort type atmosphere...and see what happens.
Have any data to back up that assertion?Slap "Disney Train" on something out of New York...an overnight transport to the Magic Kingdom pinned on the back of the Silver trains.... Would it take 6 cars/8 cars/10 cars for breakeven? Would the loads be there? Yep.
Nor have any businesses stayed in business running the way that you suggest. If you're going to make a case otherwise, you're going to have to come up with some compelling evidence as to why you think it'll be different this time.No business would ever stay in business long running the way Amtrak does.
Smartest thing that has been said about this Clown, even W Believed in SOMETHING!!! (Bet you $10,000 he Loses!!! :giggle: ) Wonder if he'll Ride to the Republican Convention on the Circus Train, what a Joke!!! :lol: :lol: :lol:He's just saying this to cater to typical conservatives who like to use Amtrak as an example of "wasteful" spending. If he gets voted in and actually looks at facts, he wouldn't be stupid enough to actaully go through with it. Even George Bush realized it, lol.
That being said, I don't plan on voting for him.
Jim,Smartest thing that has been said about this Clown, even W Believed in SOMETHING!!! (Bet you $10,000 he Loses!!! :giggle: ) Wonder if he'll Ride to the Republican Convention on the Circus Train, what a Joke!!! :lol: :lol: :lol:He's just saying this to cater to typical conservatives who like to use Amtrak as an example of "wasteful" spending. If he gets voted in and actually looks at facts, he wouldn't be stupid enough to actaully go through with it. Even George Bush realized it, lol.
That being said, I don't plan on voting for him.
+1 (I'm voting third party)Jim,Smartest thing that has been said about this Clown, even W Believed in SOMETHING!!! (Bet you $10,000 he Loses!!! :giggle: ) Wonder if he'll Ride to the Republican Convention on the Circus Train, what a Joke!!! :lol: :lol: :lol:He's just saying this to cater to typical conservatives who like to use Amtrak as an example of "wasteful" spending. If he gets voted in and actually looks at facts, he wouldn't be stupid enough to actaully go through with it. Even George Bush realized it, lol.
That being said, I don't plan on voting for him.
He could have ridden the train that Obama rode into Washington three years ago, but that train is a wreck!!
Nor have any businesses stayed in business running the way that you suggest. If you're going to make a case otherwise, you're going to have to come up with some compelling evidence as to why you think it'll be different this time.
I don't think Republicans are really against unions. In fact I don't believe they even understand what a union is and wouldn't even recognise one if it came by another name. They are against an abstract concept representing what they imagine a union to be. A bit like the way they rant about Keynesian economics and socialism, also things whose names they hate without actually knowing what they mean.Um, so which part is the funny part again?While this seems to be largely true, here's the funny part. The things that some Republican's seem to support, roads & buses, require many more union workers than do trains. For example, out in Salt Lake City, their bus division required 1,023 workers in 2009 while the light rail division required 314 workers. And it's not like the buses are moving two or three times more people to warrant a larger staff. In fact the buses barely move 7 million more rides than light rail did. They needed 1 employee for every 20,192 rides provided on a bus and 1 employee for every 42,627 rides provided by light rail. A Republican wanting a smaller union would actually be better off voting for more rail.
You are aware that private companies have tried to offer rail travel in the manner you describe and gone out of business, right?. Saying that other businesses provide good service and make a profit is meaningless noise, unless you're prepared to discuss how a private company can pay the costs associated with hauling a sufficient number of passengers around in the style you describe at a price that will be sufficient to make a profit.No businesses that deliver service, quality, fair price? You are right! There are no such business that exist!!!!Nor have any businesses stayed in business running the way that you suggest. If you're going to make a case otherwise, you're going to have to come up with some compelling evidence as to why you think it'll be different this time.
As far as what I suggested above, I would never suggest that the operational costs of higher end service be covered by the taxpayer. Quite the contrary, as you relentlessly point out sleeper service can and should supplement the coach class service.
This happens daily...thousands upon thousands of times in the airline industry through yield management.
It happens daily with thousands and thousands of purchases in department stores.
Convince them to spend the money to make the investment in passenger rail.But you know what, I bet you and I agree on more than what is seen as our differences....we want the same thing. Now the question for you, (without the name calling), is how do you persuade a politician to embrace a sensible passenger rail future?
The fact that rail is not the only transportation method that is subsidized by the government and that a fiscal case can be made for investing in passenger rail instead of building road after road after road.What areas do you feel need the most attention?
If someone were to light Mitt Romney on fire, he would have trouble communicating the fact that he was hot to people watching him. Then after 2 minutes, he would try to convince people that he was cold. 2 minutes after that he would be trying to convince people that he's always been on fire. Then he would just give up and try to convince the people watching by saying that it doesn't really matter if he's hot or cold, because he's rich enough that it won't matter.What areas, being specific to this topic, would you think a Mitt Romney could communicate to the sensible base and the broader American public in terms of rational rail network? (don't worry about the radical right-cut-everything-for-votes)
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