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HSR crowding out local transportation projects

March 15, 2010 By Stephen Smith

by Stephen Smith

Yet another way in which Obama’s high-speed rail plans are derailing actual progress in getting Americans out of their cars:

BUENA PARK, Calif. — Mayor Art Brown spent years pushing for a commuter train station combined with nearby housing in his community. But as townhouses are being finished around the $14 million Metrolink station, he’s facing the prospect that California’s high-speed rail line may plow right through his beloved project.

“The only option they presented to us was either losing the condo units or losing our train station,” Brown said of an engineering presentation to city leaders last year.

That a successful effort to get car-dependent Californians to embrace mass transit could be derailed by another transportation project may strike some as ironic. But it’s also one of the hidden costs — and a potential harbinger of delay — in the ambitious plan that would enable passengers to speed the 430 miles between Los Angeles and San Francisco in just 2 1/2 hours.

By the way, the projected cost of a one-way ticket on the high-speed rail line from LA to SF has risen from $55 to $105. Despite the fact that intraurban trips account for the vast majority of transportation use in America, the Obama administration and other politicians prefer to focus on expensive boondoggles like high-speed rail, often at the expense of more mundane, but much more important local projects like the Buena Park Metrolink station.

Originally posted on my blog.

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Filed Under: Transportation Tagged With: high speed rail, Stephen Smith

About Stephen Smith

I graduated Spring 2010 from Georgetown undergrad, with an entirely unrelated and highly regrettable major that might have made a little more sense if I actually wanted to become an international trade lawyer, but which alas seems good for little else.

I still do most of the tweeting for Market Urbanism

Stephen had previously written on urbanism at Forbes.com. Articles Profile; Reason Magazine, and Next City

  • jim

    The obsession with 2.5 hours – instead of 3 or even 3.5 is making this project a lot more destructive and expensive than it needs to be. Acela already dominates the airlines at 2:50 between NYC and DC and pulls a 37% market share between Boston and NYC at 3:45. I'll gladly make the 5 hour Amtrak trip to Boston over flying. On the best of flying days the trip is 4 hours door-to-door . . . but with all of the hassle, discomfort and uncertainty associated with flying.

  • Patrick

    Oh, boo hoo. This isn't “crowding out.” Crowding out is when government investment preempts private investment. Not when one government project requires modifying another government project. And it isn't like they're losing anything – they just have to rebuild the station nearby. A waste of money to be sure, but not exactly a failure of high-speed rail.

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