Government or Private company
California -v- Florida
I've used the high speed rail system in Europe and loved it. It's the best way to travel compared to todays air travelBut with gas prices rising and traffic congestion strangling many American cities, passengers, investors, and government planners are all reconsidering railroads. Several new projects have sprung up across the country, aiming to link major cities a few hundred miles apart, where a train might provide a more convenient journey than a plane, car, or bus. Some of these projects are led by state governments, others by private companies. The contrast between the two is dramatic. To illuminate that difference, compare the government-run California High Speed Rail project with Brightline, a new private rail system in Florida.
Approved in 2008, California High Speed Rail (CHSR) was expected to deliver a 520-mile two-track, electrified high-speed railway on an all-new route between Los Angeles and San Francisco by 2029. Fourteen years later, CHSR is now only expected to have a 171-mile single-track section between Madera and Bakersfield will be operational by 2030. Meanwhile the project’s cost has ballooned to $80 billion from an original budget of $33 billion, and costs are expected to rise further to $100 billion, or triple the original budget.
Meanwhile in Florida, a very different kind of passenger railroad is already up and running. Brightline was launched in 2012 by the Florida East Coast Railway, a private freight railroad. Unlike CHSR, Brightline mostly uses existing routes, removing the need to acquire (or appropriate) large amounts of land. Instead of building the whole line before beginning any passenger services (as CHSR is doing), Brightline began construction on a 70-mile section from Miami to West Palm Beach in 2014 and opened it to passengers in 2018. This meant that Brightline already had an operational, revenue-producing service before embarking on the 170-mile northward extension to Orlando Airport. That extension is expected to open in 2023, and the entire project will cost about $1.75 billion, raised through private financing
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02-06-2023, 08:16 AM #1
A tale of 2 states and 2 different rail systems
Scubastevo :-What percentage of women have STDs? (serious) If I just wanted to go bareback with any girl that I could get with, what are my chances of ending up bed ridden with STDs?
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02-06-2023, 08:44 AM #2
Always been on government bloat, especially in the US. $1.6 million to install a public toilet in San Francisco. Gotta have studies, environmental impact studies, project management, family members of city council need to be consultants on the "project," no bid contracts with $50-100K cash delivered in envelopes to city council members. 3rd world style corruption and graft in the richest country.
A plan to get high speed rail running from Atlanta to DC was passed in the 1990s. Maybe by 2050 it will be running. Billions have been spent in NC and VA to straighten a few pieces of track and close some intersections. After all that money and a few decades a train from Raleigh to DC is 5.5 hours instead of 6. Such efficiency.
Anyway, so after visiting Disney people can take a train to Miami later this year or vice versa? Sweet.Light weight! Light weight baby!!!!
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02-06-2023, 09:18 AM #3
The Florida rail project isn't entirely a private endeavor, similar to Disney they were given the authority to issue tax free bonds and the state is providing some maintenance costs. The actual owner is the Japanese SoftBank company.
Still, the point is taken that in the right environment this chit can get done.
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02-06-2023, 09:38 AM #4
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02-06-2023, 09:55 AM #5
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02-06-2023, 10:08 AM #6
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02-06-2023, 10:11 AM #7
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02-06-2023, 10:19 AM #8
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02-06-2023, 10:20 AM #9
I often wonder when people will get tired of the government wasting their money. Taxes keep going up, services keep going down.
For every man, there is a sentence, a string of words, that has the power to destroy him
"The strong do what they can, and the weak suffer what they must" -Thucydides
Shall not be Infringed. FUK CHINA.
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02-06-2023, 11:34 AM #10
There has been continual more graft in the US, likely by becoming a lower trust culture. Multiculturalism it turns out isn't our strength. I remember reading about a bridge in the US that had to be replaced. It was outrageously expensive. For considerably less money the Swedes built a twice as long bridge with a subway section attached to it.
We complain about our health care costs and 'liberals' associate it with privatization, but even though only around ~35% of our healthcare is paid for by government, the government still spends more per capita than countries with universal healthcare systems. If we get universal healthcare in the US it will still cost a fortune, more than other countries per person. We'd be shifting where it comes from, which is both good and bad. A little off topic, but related because there is so much inefficiency purposely built into US government programs. A lot comes from politicians paying back their supporters. Look no further than who donates heaviest to campaigns. Oh look all banks and pharma companies. What a surprise they get Trillions of tax dollars funneled to them.
Anyway, it's good to Florida bucking the trend. Probably specifically because it's owned by a foreign company.Light weight! Light weight baby!!!!
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02-06-2023, 12:08 PM #11
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02-06-2023, 12:13 PM #12
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02-06-2023, 12:18 PM #13
Splitting the tiniest of red kunt hairs
This is why I don’t understand people that are in favor of raising taxes in any way. You really think your money will be better spent by the government? I can’t think of any government program or product that is better than its private counterpart (If one exists). Maybe military just due to the size difference but on a per dollar spent metric private military blows it out of the waterThe character "Big Deeps" is an online persona. Any comments made by the internet persona "Big Deeps" should be taken with a grain of salt and shall not reflect on the integrity and morals of the actor portraying "Big Deeps." Please respect kayfabe and respect the heel persona.
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02-06-2023, 12:19 PM #14
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02-06-2023, 12:21 PM #15
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02-06-2023, 02:34 PM #16
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02-06-2023, 02:59 PM #17
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02-06-2023, 03:07 PM #18
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02-06-2023, 03:46 PM #19
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02-06-2023, 04:05 PM #20
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02-06-2023, 06:09 PM #21
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02-06-2023, 06:15 PM #22
I know that
We are just back from the UK which included a trip to Barcelona by train. Even the UK system was punctual and on time unlike anything California has to offer
BART system gets flat wheels when it rains
https://www.kqed.org/news/11853438/c...fleet-deliveryScubastevo :-What percentage of women have STDs? (serious) If I just wanted to go bareback with any girl that I could get with, what are my chances of ending up bed ridden with STDs?
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02-06-2023, 06:31 PM #23
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02-06-2023, 06:46 PM #24
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02-06-2023, 06:47 PM #25
And look at the difference. The Florida plan was a decade from concept to completion, at 1/100th the cost of the California plan. The CA HSR might get completed 30 years after it was passed, hopefully just 6x its original cost.
We're supposed to get a commuter rail system locally here, with voters saying yes in 2016. Mostly using existing rail lines, with a little bit of new track. Only now are they beginning to contemplate where it should stop. The first parts of it, 20 miles using existing lines might be ready by 2030 and cost as much as the Florida line, but probably not. Much efficiency.Light weight! Light weight baby!!!!
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