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The California High Speed Rail Authority will discuss the high speed alignment from LA to San Diego on Tuesday. Proposed is that the terminal at the airport be studied as part of the EIR/EIS. No stop downtown to be studied.
As I understand, community meetings will be conducted to gather feedback on this proposal??? The reasons why are said to be that there is basically competition for the ROW and a below grade alignment may have hazardous waste or ground water impacts. An above grade alignment had other impacts. And, apparently, the City has implied that they prefer an airport location. I think this is wrong. Construction techniques are available that can mitigate such concerns. |
More wasted money.
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eburress:
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CA's population is now 38M and it is expected to increase to as many as 50M - 60M people by 2050. The alternative to high speed rail is spending tens of billions of dollars on highway expansion. The cost to widen I-5 in San Diego Co, alone is estimated to be $3.3B - $4.5B: http://www.signonsandiego.com/news/2...ase-daily-i-5/ The cost to upgrade Hwy 99 to interstate standards is estimated to cost as much as $26B: http://www.recordnet.com/apps/pbcs.d...53/1001/NEWS01 It's also a myth that drivers pay for the cost the roads. Roads are massively subsidized: http://www.cahsrblog.com/2011/02/cal...ly-subsidized/ |
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High speed rail isn't an alternative to commuting up and down the 5. High speed rail is an alternative to flying from LA to San Francisco. High speed rail doesn't compete with highways...it competes with airports...and if this state is going to sink billions into something, it ought to be airports. |
eburress:
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Also, where do you propose to build a new runway at San Diego or SFO? These airport expansions aren't without costs, either. The current modernization at LAX will cost $5B - $7B. |
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I didn't say airport expansion was without cost. I said "if this state is going to sink billions into something, it ought to be airports". |
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Since we seem to be on the topic of high speed rail, I need to ask something that's been bothering me...
I've looked at the proposed route on www.cahighspeedrail.ca.gov and can't understand how this route would translate into "high speed'. If I read this correctly, a train leaving San Diego and bound for San Francisco would make stops at these cities: Escondido Murrieta Riverside Ontario City of Industry LA Burbank Sylmar Palmdale Bakersfield Fresno Gilroy San Jose Redwood City SFO airport and finally, San Francisco How does a train making 15 stops compete with a direct flight from San Diego to SFO? And can high speeds be reached if it's stopping every 20-50 miles? This is a serious question, not an anti-train rant. |
As in all things, San Diego gets the shit end on this. The folks in coastal Northern SD and Southern OC thought the train would hurt their property values so they objected to the project and preferred an eastern alignment via Escondido and Inland Empire.
Funny thing is that the train will actually increase property values due to improved accessibility (provided you are not on top of it). Gas prices were hurting property values in the I-15 inland corridor area even before the recession. The expansion of the 15 has made these commutes easier helping to preserve the attractiveness of those areas. Not saying encouraging people to live farther out is good, but you get the point. |
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And in other news, the City approves 4 billion in redevelopment spending.
http://www.signonsandiego.com/news/2...ment-spending/ The San Diego City Council approved $4.1 billion in redevelopment projects Monday — possibly the largest defensive move by a California city against proposed state elimination of redevelopment agencies. Notable projects: "The projects, contained in a 72-page list, include mundane neighborhood improvements such as repairs to sidewalks to more than $1 billion in affordable housing to $16 million to design three covers or lids over Interstate 5 to bridge the gap between downtown and Balboa Park. The projects could be dropped, changed or added to and could be built only when funds become available. It does not include the proposed $800 million Chargers stadium in East Village. But it does earmark $150 million for acquiring the city block at 14th and K where the stadium might go and cleaning up toxic wastes left from its current use as the city bus yard." |
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The problem with going North is geography. So many canyons and hills, streets are not on a grid at all. It is going to be a big challenge to make light rail efficient in either coastal or inland North County. |
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We'll be lucky to have our line running by 2020... |
Trains, both light rail and high speed are cool!
Only a few problems: Few people want to ride them. Very expensive and intrusive to build. Governments are beyond broke and can't afford to build them or subsidize them after they are built. This constant comparison to Europe and third world countries that have rail systems has been argued for years and the differences make the comparisons moot. So quit rehashing the same crap-you are boring. |
I forgot that freeways and airports are completely free.
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