**The Bullet Train Epitomizes Golden State Corruption**

The Bullet Train Epitomizes Golden State Corruption

_Authored by Edward Ring via AmGreatness.com,_ (https://amgreatness.com/2023/04/18/the-bullet-train-epitomizes-golden-state-corruption/)

**_California’s failing rail project is a metaphor for a state that has turned its back on the ordinary, hardworking people who live there..._**

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**It sounded too good to be true, and it was.** Travel from downtown San Francisco to downtown Los Angeles in two hours via high-speed rail. California voters in 2008 approvedProposition 1A (https://ballotpedia.org/California_Proposition_1A,_High-Speed_Rail_Bond_Measure_(2008)), authorizing $9.95 billion in general obligation bonds to build this so-called “bullet train.” They were told not only that the total cost would only be $33 billion but also that the entire 500-mile system would be running by 2030.

Fat chance.

In March of this year, the California High-Speed Rail Authorityreleased its latest progress report (https://hsr.ca.gov/wp-content/uploads/2023/03/2023-Project-Update-Report-FINAL-022823.pdf). The project is now projected to cost _$127 billion_, and there is no longer a projected completion date. The initial stretch of track, a 171-mile segment across the sparsely populated, pancake-flat San Joaquin Valley, is projected to be done by 2030 at a cost of $35 billion.

**These are staggering numbers, a testament to a staggering waste of financial and material resources.** For this first segment of track, Californians are going to pay $206 million _per mile_, and that’s if there aren’t any more overruns. The financing alone—based on preposterously optimistic ridership projections for this segment of 6.6 million riders per year, and a 30-year-term at 5 percent annual interest—would work out to a cost of $348 _per ticket_. Not exactly an easily affordable means of travel.

**California’s high-speed rail project, in short, is a disaster.** Everything about it fails any rational cost-benefit analysis. It will be a permanent financial drain on Californians, because in order for anyone to be able to afford to use the train for a daily commute, ticket revenue won’t even pay operating costs, much less pay back the construction costs.

From an environmental perspective, the California High-Speed Rail Authority boasts that the initial segment will reduce total vehicle miles traveled in California by 183 million miles. That sounds like a lot until you take into account that Californians logged340 _billion_ vehicle miles traveled (https://www.thezebra.com/resources/driving/average-miles-driven-per-year/) in 2022. High-speed rail by 2030 expects to reduce that total by _1/20th of one percent_.

But the opportunity cost of blowing $127 billion, and counting, on a train that will not significantly alleviate either traffic congestion or “greenhouse gases” is perhaps the bitterest joke of all. For $127 billion, Californians could build infrastructure that would improve their quality of life for generations.

Even in absurdly expensive California, $127 billion goes a long way. That much money could pay toraise the height of the Shasta Dam (https://www.usbr.gov/mp/ncao/shasta-enlargement.html), buildthe proposed Sites Reservoir (https://sitesproject.org/) to its original 2 million acre-feet storage capacity,restore every aqueduct in the state (https://costa.house.gov/media/press-releases/costa-introduces-bill-restore-san-joaquin-valley-canals), build new systems toharvest and store storm runoff (https://pacinst.org/wp-content/uploads/2022/04/PI_California_Untapped_Urban_Water_Potential_2022-1.pdf), upgrade every major treatment plant in the state torecycle and reuse wastewater (https://watereuse.org/wp-content/uploads/2019/07/WateReuse-CA-Action-Plan_July-2019_r5-2.pdf), refurbish theDiablo Canyon nuclear power plant (https://www.cnbc.com/2021/12/01/diablo-canyon-open-could-save-21-billion-mit-stanford-scientists.html) to last till 2050 or longer, build twoadditional nuclear power plants (https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2016-02-25/why-america-pays-more-for-nuclear-power) of the same size, and resurface and add lanes toevery major interstate freeway (https://californiapolicycenter.org/californias-transportation-future-part-four-the-common-road/).

For $127 billion, even at ridiculously inflated California prices for public works, Californians could have abundant, affordable water and power, they could have a freeway system upgraded for the 21st century, and they would still have tens of billions left.

**Corruption and Waste as a Way of Life**

The problem with spending money on rational, practical solutions that lower the cost of living and improve the quality of life for millio…

https://www.zerohedge.com/political/bullet-train-epitomizes-golden-state-corruption

Ah, California's bullet train project, the ultimate embodiment of cost exaggeration and bureaucracy; nothing better encapsulates the wasteful culture of overcommitment that has taken root in US state capitals. Citizens were sold a future where they would traverse their home turf with speed and efficiency while agriculture fretted over closed well-heads, but it appears the reality was always intended to be vastly different from reality. Rather than a speedy ride across sprawling freeways with muscle car-like acceleration seeing passengers thrive on balanceless interiors for brevity's sake, we have an annoyingly dawdling train system full of official finance shenanigans that seems more fit for the steam powered days reminiscent Hudsons rather than jet propelled electrics gone fast. If this is what success looks like then I will book seat 12B as reportedly taking a trip back to antiquity would offer more value at such exorbitant cost!)

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