Abandoning high-speed rail will be more costly for California than the project itself–LOL

This article was written by a person who used billions of tax dollars to create a boondoggle for unions and greedy corporations.  He stole private property via law suits and eminent domain.  He tore apart communities—knowing he could never get the $200 billion to finish the project nor a dime to operate the train to nowhere.  Now he is crying that it is too expensive to FIX the damage he did, without spending  $200 billion, money we do not have, for a project that can not pay for itself nor have riders to use it.

“Even if one overlooked the millions of potential riders in those cities, any alternative route chosen would still lack sufficient funding and would still have been subject to environmental lawsuits. 

Still, it would be a mistake to abandon this crucial project now, leaving concrete guideways in the sky empty of tracks, trains and travelers. No other form of transportation works as efficiently at connecting people across the distances of the Golden State as high-speed rail. Airplanes may make the trip from gate to gate in an hour. But when you add in travel times to and from the airport, a trip from downtown LA to downtown SF takes roughly the same amount of time on a bullet train as on a plane – yet the plane spews far more carbon.

Potential riders?  Every study shows this is not true.  I can drive from Simi Valley to either San Fran or Sacramento in under six hours, with one stop for gas.  In my Kia Niro that uses 7.5 gallons of gas, each way.  Less than a ticket on the train to nowhere—and NO government subsidies in the tens of billions to get me there.  Seriously, is it the responsibility of the California taxpayer to provide me with transportation to Fresno, Palmdale or Stockton?


Abandoning high-speed rail will be more costly for California than the project itself

Robert Cruischuck, CalMatters,   2/10/23   

IN SUMMARY

Delays and rising costs have given high-speed rail critics an opening, but proponents say that abandoning this crucial project now would be a mistake.

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Sixty years ago, construction workers in the San Joaquin Valley began two major infrastructure projects that did much to build modern California: the State Water Project and Interstate 5. Backed by strong support in Sacramento, including adequate funding, the freeway connected drivers to Los Angeles in 1972, and the aqueduct began delivering water to Southern California in 1973.

Today another major infrastructure project rises in the San Joaquin Valley. The high-speed rail project is as essential to 21st-century California as the aqueducts and interstates were to the 20th century, enabling fast travel powered by clean energy to some of the state’s most populated places. Countries around the world have built or expanded their high-speed rail systems in recent years, carrying large numbers of passengers and reducing the need for carbon-intensive travel by airplanes or cars.

Unfortunately, California’s high-speed rail project has struggled. Unlike the aqueduct or the interstate, high-speed rail has never enjoyed more than tepid support in the state Capitol, even as it maintains majority support among California voters. The lack of legislative support means the project has never been fully funded. It has been trapped in a morass of land use regulations and lawsuits from project opponents that delayed construction and helped drive up costs.

Delays and rising costs have given an opening for critics to try and defund it, even if it means leaving unfinished infrastructure in the San Joaquin Valley. Some critics claim that the problem was a route serving cities like Fresno and Palmdale rather than a more direct path between San Francisco and L.A. 

Even if one overlooked the millions of potential riders in those cities, any alternative route chosen would still lack sufficient funding and would still have been subject to environmental lawsuits. 

Still, it would be a mistake to abandon this crucial project now, leaving concrete guideways in the sky empty of tracks, trains and travelers. No other form of transportation works as efficiently at connecting people across the distances of the Golden State as high-speed rail. Airplanes may make the trip from gate to gate in an hour. But when you add in travel times to and from the airport, a trip from downtown LA to downtown SF takes roughly the same amount of time on a bullet train as on a plane – yet the plane spews far more carbon.

Driving is simply not competitive. Without traffic, it takes 5-6 hours to drive from L.A. to SF. With traffic, it can take a lot longer. I remember a New Year’s Day drive from L.A. to Berkeley that took 10 hours in the early 2000s. Even if Californians switch en masse to electric vehicles, it will still take most of the day to drive from the Bay Area to Southern California. And that’s without the comforts of a train – the ability to stand up, walk around, get food, use the bathroom and work remotely.

Global experience has proven that if you build it, they will ride. High-speed rail systems connecting cities of 500 miles’ distance or less typically grab a majority of the market share on that route away from airlines. That includes Amtrak’s Acela train connecting Washington, D.C. and New York City.

The evidence is clear that California should finish the job and complete the high-speed rail service between SF and L.A. Yes, the cost has increased but the project remains more affordable than expanding airports or freeways. Its carbon emissions reductions will be essential to achieving the state’s climate goals. 

Neither the State Water Project nor the interstates were cheap. But they proved their value many times over during the last five decades. California’s high-speed rail project will prove its value many times over during the rest of this century – if political leaders in Sacramento commit to its completion.


The high-speed rail project is one of the largest and most ambitious undertakings in California history. Critics argue that the rising costs outweigh the project’s benefits, and the funds could be better spent on critical issues, such as the state’s water crisis.

3 thoughts on “Abandoning high-speed rail will be more costly for California than the project itself–LOL

  1. Pie in the sky California… nothing changes. Let’s all drive electric cars using solar and wind.. let’s empty our reservoirs to protect the fish…The heck with residents and farmers..no more gas stoves…Gov Newsom calls the second amendment a suicide pack. High speed rail is just more of the same.

  2. It is amazing, They waste tax dollars. They propose plans that have little utility or long range success.

    They pour millions into planning (if you can call it that) break ground. Find out is it worthless.

    Instead of tying off the gang-green limb, and amputation they just keep going. The patient will die, but because of heart pumps and force O2 it appears to be alive. (forget viability)

    It is time to turn the idiots out of office, but then again who do you turn off theft of taxpayer money that is a cottage industry in itself?

    Huell would have said it…..what happened to the Calif. Gold?

    (it was stolen by Leftest)

  3. Mr. Cruischuck is an absolute moron with aspirations to be next in line to replace KJP as Scarecrow Joe’s next press secretary. Either that or he is bucking to be the next director of the CA EDD. He claims that the majority of Californians support the train. BS. He has absolutely no proof to back it up. He is obviously ignorant of the old saying, If you are digging yourself into a hole, stop digging.

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