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California's High Speed Rail Project Runs Out of Money

Discussion in 'Too Hot for Swamp Gas' started by chemgator, Oct 13, 2021.

  1. chemgator

    chemgator GC Hall of Fame

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    Since you asked about S.F - L.A. and TPA-ORL-MIA, here are the numbers.

    San Francisco and L.A. have 18 MM people in their metropolitan areas and 382 miles between them, or 47,000 people per mile. This is borderline for having the population density to break even. The additional cost for building HSR in the U.S. (much less the most environmentally sensitive state in the country) pushes this one towards fail. You have more additional costs on this line, however, with the potential for earthquakes. You can add population to the equation, but doing so will slow down the train as you add stops in San Jose and other smaller cities. A two hour train ride is barely competitive with a 50-minute flight, so a 3-hour train ride (or longer) would be less competitive. The distance between the two major cities makes it somewhat unfeasible by itself. This project has failure written all over it from the start (plus massive cost overruns).

    The cities of Tampa, Orlando, and Miami have metropolitan populations combining for 11.5 million people, with a total distance of track of about 321 miles. That's only 36,000 people per mile. You get a slight boost for Disney being a tourist Mecca and being on the route, pushing it a little closer to feasibility, but there are other negatives. There is not much in the way of light rail in any of the cities. The Deep South is no place to be walking several blocks in the heat with luggage and worrying about lightning storms, so passengers are stuck taking a bus or taxi or taking their chances with an Uber driver. This project will fail. People will take it to go to a football game or concert, but that is not enough ridership to justify the massive cost. The only crowded section will be MCO to Disney.
     
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  2. dingyibvs

    dingyibvs Premium Member

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    I think the LA to SF line can work...if they can control the cost. But the ship has probably sailed on that for now. The thing with building a line like this is that people tend to gravitate toward stops along the way. It might be 47k per mile right now, but once it's built it'll probably grow.
     
  3. chemgator

    chemgator GC Hall of Fame

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    If something is a necessity, then it does not need to turn a profit. The U.S. military does not turn a profit, but it is a necessity to prevent other nations from invading us or our allies and trading partners. If you don't have roads in general, then groceries are not delivered to your supermarket, and you have to grow your own food or starve. Can you point to any modern society that does not have roads (because I can point to at least one that does not have high speed rail)? While it may be true that some money is wasted on roads that are not needed, overall, the roads we have are well-used and worth the investment. The rare cases where a member of Congress pork-barrels a road to nowhere (like Ted Stevens' of Alaska and his bridge to nowhere), he is pilloried and ridiculed.

    This is typical of the far left wing. You are so blinded by your own partisan viewpoint that you refuse to discuss something as simple and obvious as economic feasibility of a (non-necessary) project. Your side wants it, therefore, we should have it (and "you"--meaning everyone else--should pay for it). It seems to be a lack of maturity on the part of the AOC's in the world and their supporters: Step 1 - shut down discussion; Step 2 - demand what you want; Step 3 - force everyone else to pay for it.
     
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  4. SeabudGator

    SeabudGator GC Legend

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    You are exactly right but wrong in your application. We should first determine what is a necessity. In dense areas with too many cars and climate issues, rail may be a necessity. In rural areas where a developer is trying to bring urban sprawl that will cost the public but make him/her rich, maybe roads are not a necessity. Not all roads are “well used” nor would all trains be.

    But the funny thing is you issuing a blanket statement that about all roads are good, saying trains are pork, labeling me as liberal, wildly categorizing all liberals as wasteful - and then having the temerity to accuse others of shutting down the conversation! Utter binary conclusions followed by aspersions and wrapped in castigation about others not being open minded is rich irony. OAN awaits your arrival. Just wow.
     
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  5. carpeveritas

    carpeveritas Moderator

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    Given the number of millionaires and billionaires living in California one has to wonder why there is no private investment to build HSR.
     
  6. OklahomaGator

    OklahomaGator Jedi Administrator Moderator VIP Member

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    What seems to kill HSR is that every city along the way wants the rail to stop in their city, it kind of kills the "high speed" part of the project.
     
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  7. Gatorrick22

    Gatorrick22 GC Hall of Fame

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    If we could depend on the budget and ticket price to be what you say? It sounds like a great deal, but you know what they say. If it's too good to be true then... But if.... That's one huge if.

    That ticket price is completely unrealistic for many reasons. With that ticket price the demand would crush that supply. And you know how that gets evened out.
     
  8. carpeveritas

    carpeveritas Moderator

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    I fail to see how you can possibly compare spending on roads as an equivalent benefit to HSR. First and foremost once the interstate highway was built it became the onus of the states to maintain them. The Federal government owns very little when it comes to the operation and maintenance of roadways in the United States including the interstate highway system.

    What do roads offer that HSR does not? Roads are the pathway to every corner of the United States. From places of recreation to small towns to major metropolitan areas. Roads are the glue that keeps shelves stocked and offer ease of mobility for people to go about their daily lives. That's where the money needs to go.

    Who benefits from the roadway system? Everyone benefits regardless of public transportation.

    Who benefits from subsidized HSR? Those who use HSR which is a subset of everyone. While those that use HSR may see it as a benefit in reality it would be a novelty of minimal use. If the passengers were made to pay the full load encompassing operations and maintenance they wouldn't use HSR at all. Add insult to injury the travel expense of getting around at the desired destination and scheduling requirements. I doubt seriously that people in SF or LA would choose to use HSR to work in a city that is 383 miles away. An occasional visit maybe for daily work never. In the case of the latter people will move to where they choose to work.
     
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  9. chemgator

    chemgator GC Hall of Fame

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    Actually, I was just giving you a taste of your own medicine. (MSNBC awaits your arrival, BTW.)

    And your reading comprehension is really poor:

    1) I did not mention the word "liberal" in my post. The "far left" is presumably a subset of the liberals. And I did not state that you belonged to the far left, I only suggested that you had some things in common with them.

    2) I did not say that "all" roads were good.

    3) I did not say that trains were automatically pork (read my previous posts--I made a case for building HSR in the NE corridor).


    As far as your arguments above, they are rather weak. You can have rail in "dense" areas--in fact, most large cities in the NE already do. It's called "light rail", also known as subway transit and elevated trains. Many larger and smaller towns are visited by Amtrak trains. We have plenty of rail already, just not of the high speed variety. Just because rail might be a necessity, does not mean that high speed rail is a necessity. The cost for HSR is an order or two of magnitude greater than light rail or Amtrak, so it would be wise to give it a lot more thought before you invest in it.

    And your argument that whenever a developer decides to put in a neighborhood, roads should not go to that neighborhood, just sounds bizarre. Why would anyone want to live in a neighborhood with no access by road? It is irrelevant whether the developer becomes rich or not from the neighborhood--how is punishing the new residents of the neighborhood going to bring "justice" to the developer? Doesn't the developer pay income taxes? Won't the new homeowners pay property taxes? What do you have against roads, anyway? Do you live in a houseboat or something?
     
  10. chemgator

    chemgator GC Hall of Fame

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    He is in for a rude awakening when he finds out that he has to pay $20 to park at the train station. :) However, if the parking cost is only $18, he will be able to celebrate. Actually, parking at the train station would only be that high if the trains ran mostly full. In Florida, that will only happen for a few hours per week. So parking will probably be reasonable in a nearly empty parking lot, and will be another indication that the rail line is a failure.

    BTW, I think he only mentioned the parking cost, and not the ticket price.
     
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  11. SeabudGator

    SeabudGator GC Legend

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    Cities, within and between, where HSR belong, has terrible issues from cars:
    - 8 parking spaces/car. America has eight parking spaces for every car. Here’s how cities are rethinking that land
    - congestion
    - climate change

    HSR benefits city dwellers (net payors to government). Endless roads benefit rural areas. City people take taxis/ubers when the rail ends - no car, no parking fee, no Insurance. Take your smarmy “he will have to pay parking” and realize you are wrong … again.

    But the point was, and is, your utter failure to consider that HSR, like many roads, serves some members of society in denser areas. Rural roads are extremely expensive but somehow they are a “necessity.” Rather, you argue “roads good, HSR boondoggle.”

    Reminds me of when Louisiana legislators voted to deny federal funding to the northeast after hurricane sandy. Right before Katrina.

    Just because HSR means nothing in your neighborhood doesn’t make it a boondoggle.
     
  12. ridgetop

    ridgetop GC Hall of Fame

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    No dog in his fight. HAR won ever come near where I abide… however
    It seems one argument is that HSR would benefit those living in cities.. urban areas. But isn’t that usually serviced by light rail? Subways and elevated rains. Why would Chicago need an HSR? If the idea is that the HAR could quickly go from one majo city o another across a great distance… ok. That I get. But it wouldn’t be able to replace a car or trucking or even planes. How many would use the rail from Tampa to Orlando? How many would need to use I to make it viable? From LA to Sacramento ?
    I just don’t see the return.
     
  13. chemgator

    chemgator GC Hall of Fame

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    Rural roads are "extremely expensive"? Compared to what, high speed rail? Let's see, a rural 2-lane road costs $2.5 million per mile. California's high speed rail currently costs $256 million per mile (and they aren't finished spending yet--it could go a lot higher). High speed rail requires stations at each stop, which will cost hundreds of millions of dollars. Rural roads require stop signs, which cost about a hundred dollars each. HSR is literally like, a hundred times more expensive.

    Cost Per Mile Models

    How do you expect farmers to get their food to market? Mule train? There are also a lot of industries that are located on rural roads. How are they supposed to receive their raw materials and send out their products, especially if they are landlocked and without freight rail service? (And even if they do have rail service, a certain percentage of their products will go out by truck because that is what a percentage of their customers want.) The economy would be crippled without the road system. Our economy is doing just fine without high speed rail, for some reason.

    Have you even been to a country with high speed rail? Have you ever ridden on high speed rail? Have you seen how full these trains are during normal usage? I have. I saw a lot of empty seats in three countries that had HSR.

    Just because something benefits someone, does not mean that everyone should pay for it. What makes your city dwellers so special? Where are they going that is so important that they need to get there in a hurry? Why aren't Amtrak, Delta, Hertz, and Greyhound good enough for them? They have at least four good options for traveling between cities, and you're telling me that we need to give them a fifth option, at a cost of hundreds of billions of dollars. And unless I'm mistaken, your city dwellers will give us no guarantee that they will even use the fifth option. We are going to spend hundreds of billions of dollars with no more than a hope that they will use it. Will they pay more taxes if they can travel on a high speed train? Should we give more more options to the rural residents to make life fair for them? Or are they not special enough for you?

    The U.S. is just not a great country for HSR. The country is too large, and it does not have enough people (like China, for example) to justify it. With the clear and obvious exception of the northeast corridor. You have four major cities in essentially a line, with over 33 million people, over a distance of only 237 miles. No other place in the U.S. comes close to that kind of population density in a relatively short distance.
     
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  14. chemgator

    chemgator GC Hall of Fame

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    You have to vote for the boondoggle to see how big of a boondoggle it is. At least, according to the Nancy Pelosi school of government thinking.
     
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  15. slightlyskeptic

    slightlyskeptic All American

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    The problem, as always, is cost. Right now there already is a "high speed" train that runs from DC to NY called Acela. It takes 2 hours and 35 minutes to make the trip, or a whole 15 minutes faster than the regular train. Big whoop. To bring that speed down to one hour would take an optimistically estimated 30 billion dollars in new infrastructure alone....for one train route.

    That said, I'm all for HSR if it can get done in a way that makes fiscal sense. And faster DC to NY HSR probably would make fiscal sense. But too many people fall in love with idea of HSR without really looking into the feasibility of it. And if it's to be operated by Amtrak, an organization that requires a billion and a half in tax payers subsidies a year just to keep running, I'm not very optimistic.
     
    Last edited: Oct 17, 2021
  16. chemgator

    chemgator GC Hall of Fame

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    It's no surprise to me. Not many billionaires have $98+ billion to spend. Risks and liabilities are high. Chances for turning a profit are low (almost non-existent). Environmental permitting alone can take years, if not decades. If Bill Gates, Elon Musk or Jeff Bezos get a little wacky on their deathbed, they might bequeath enough money to someone to build HSR, but I don't expect it.
     
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  17. chemgator

    chemgator GC Hall of Fame

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    You can't get the speed of a train from N.Y. to D.C. (with stops in Philly and Baltimore) down to an hour, unless you use mag-lev technology (like the Pudong/Shanghai HSR train). A 225 mph high speed rail train would require about 1 hour and 37 minutes. Acela's top speed on that route is 135 mph--nowhere near fast enough to go 237 miles in one hour (not to mention making stops). You really need a 300 mph train to make the trip in an hour, and that assumes that you can complete a stop in 5 minutes or less. There is nothing you can do with $30 billion dollars to make Acela trains go 300 mph, short of strapping rockets on it and launching it into a low orbit.

    I think 97 minutes would be fast enough, however, to make HSR competitive with air travel, which is all you really need to do, especially if the stations are located in large airports. A flight will get you there in 45 minutes, but it requires you to arrive an hour or two early to make sure you don't miss your flight. For HSR, you wouldn't have to buy a ticket for a particular departure time, since the trains would leave every 10-20 minutes. So you just need some time to get through security, and wait a few minutes for the next train.
     
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  18. slightlyskeptic

    slightlyskeptic All American

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    Is your real name Casey Jones? :)
     
  19. metalcoater

    metalcoater All American

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    Yeah, the tax payers can spend billions for you to have a nice weekend.
     
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  20. carpeveritas

    carpeveritas Moderator

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    I live in the out skirts of Washington Metropolitan area and have used Acela once on my business travels to NYC. That was shortly after 9/11 when I was on a consulting engagement with IBM helping the Bank of New York recover their data center. I wasn't impressed to say very the least. It is a 3hr trip minimum depending on the number of stops in between. The fewer the stops the higher the price. Taking the shuttle from DCA to LGA is much less of a headache if you ask me.
     
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