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sirs

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Solyndra.....x7
« on: March 22, 2012, 03:11:56 AM »
Why California’s high-speed rail project is an even greater waste of federal tax dollars.
21 March 2012

The national media have devoted plenty of skeptical attention to California’s bullet-train boondoggle—from
- the ballooning cost of the California High-Speed Rail Authority project
- to its shoddy management
- to the baffling decision to build the first segment in the lightly populated Central Valley.

But the press has yet to focus on a crucial fact: the bullet train isn’t just some quirky Left Coast fiasco; it’s also a grotesque waste of federal money. The project serves as a powerful reminder of the Obama administration’s mishandling of the $787 billion stimulus that Congress passed in February 2009 with solemn assurances of prudence and accountability. The bullet-train project, in fact, can be thought of as “Solyndra times seven”—that’s how far its costs outstrip those of the much-touted Bay Area solar panel manufacturer that burned through $528 million in federal loans before declaring bankruptcy and folding last September.

In California, the federal government is committed to spending $3.5 billion—with most of those dollars coming from the 2009 stimulus—for a project whose problems are glaring. State officials are trying to remake the bullet train on the fly, promising at a legislative hearing in Silicon Valley to implement changes that would bring down the cost and speed up construction. But none of those changes alters the fact that the bullet-train project appears clearly to violate federal regulations governing stimulus spending on transportation.

The rules, published in the Federal Register on June 23, 2009, require that applications for stimulus funds to build high-speed rail projects would be approved only after “rigorous analysis,” factoring in a careful examination of the proposed project’s “financial plan (capital and operating),” “reasonableness of financial estimates,” and “quality of planning process.” Grant recipients would make regular progress reports, corroborated by Federal Railroad Administration audits. Even the most cursory analysis shows that the California bullet train falls far short of compliance with the rules.

State auditors, the University of California’s Institute for Transportation, and an ad hoc peer-review committee appointed by the legislature all lambasted the project’s financial plan as incomplete, overly ambitious, and based on unverifiable numbers.

In January, the peer-review group issued its assessment: “We cannot overemphasize the fact that moving ahead on the HSR project without credible sources of adequate funding, without a definitive business model, without a strategy to maximize the independent utility and value to the state, and without the appropriate management resources, represents an immense financial risk on the part of the state of California.” The peer review followed a damning analysis published in November by the state’s nonpartisan Legislative Analyst’s Office, perhaps the most respected agency in Sacramento, which concluded that rail officials had yet to address how to fund the (at least) $98-billion-system linking Los Angeles and San Francisco.

California has about $13 billion on hand to begin the first phase of the project. The rail authority and its boosters claim that the federal government and private investors will supply the remaining $85 billion. Those additional federal dollars are almost certainly not coming. Congressional budget cutters have targeted discretionary domestic spending, and the $260 billion transportation bill currently winding through Congress expressly prohibits California from diverting any highway funds for high-speed rail.

Meanwhile, Wall Street isn’t enamored with the project, and private investment funds have shown zero interest in partnering with California unless they receive revenue or ridership guarantees.

But guaranteeing a certain return on investment would amount to promising subsidies if the rail authority’s immense ridership forecasts don’t pan out—taxpayers would be making up the difference. And Proposition 1A—the 2008 state ballot measure providing $9.95 billion in bond money for the project—explicitly bans taxpayer-funded operating subsidies.

Rail authority executives and prominent California Democrats, including Governor Jerry Brown, Senate President Pro Tem Darrell Steinberg, and former HSRA chairman Quentin Kopp, continue to talk up the chances for substantial private investment. But the record of the last two governors, both ardent champions of the project, suggests the obstacles to such investment are larger than they first appear. Arnold Schwarzenegger explored outsourcing the construction and operation of the train to the Chinese. He failed. And in January, Brown suggested that the tens of billions of dollars that companies will pay for pollution rights in coming years under the state’s nascent cap-and-trade program could fund the project—assuming, of course, he can find a way to pry those dollars from the clutches of the California Air Resources Board, which already has plans for the uncollected funds.

The bullet train’s “reasonableness of financial estimates” is questionable, beginning with the project’s revenue forecasts. The LAO noted a projection of 44 million riders a year when the L.A.-Bay Area line is complete. That’s down from the hallucinatory claim of 117 million passengers that proponents of Prop. 1A offered in 2008, but it’s still ridiculous. In reality, 44 million passengers would be 50 percent higher than the number of people Amtrak carries to and from more than 500 stations in 46 states and three Canadian provinces each year.

How was the estimate derived?

Elizabeth Alexis, a Palo Alto finance expert and co-founder of Californians Advocating Responsible Rail Design, delved into the methodology and discovered, among other things, that the rail authority assumed that the future cost of gasoline would top $40 a gallon. Alexis also noted that the public-opinion polls that bullet-train backers crafted to gauge potential passenger interest were heavily biased. For example, 96 percent of commuters surveyed were already train riders. But unlike commuters in other states, only a tiny percentage of Californians rides the train.

Which brings us to the last element that a “rigorous analysis” must confirm before federal funds can flow: the “quality of planning process.” More than three years after voters approved the $9.95 billion bond measure, the HSRA still hasn’t determined who will operate the train once it’s built. A contractor? An existing state agency? A private-public partnership? Nobody knows.

Adding to the chaos is a lack of leadership. Until Brown purged the rail authority’s management earlier this year, bullet-train officials assumed they were doing a great job, and that their public-relations firm was to blame for the project’s sinking support.

This ugly story could soon take a welcome turn. The U.S. Government Accountability Office confirmed on March 8 that it plans to launch its own audit of the California High Speed Rail Authority. The GAO would do well to begin its inquiry with Volume 174, number 19 of the Federal Register, specifically Federal Railroad Administration Docket 2009-0045.

If those federal regulations truly have the force of law, then “Solyndra times seven” must die.

"The worst form of inequality is to try to make unequal things equal." -- Aristotle

sirs

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Re: Solyndra.....x7
« Reply #1 on: March 30, 2012, 08:54:00 PM »
Bullet train derailed? Path to demise looking clear!

Monday’s L.A. Times story with this headline — “Bid to appease bullet train critics may violate law” — and this subhead — “Revisions are in conflict with the ballot measure approved by voters and may go against the Obama administration’s plans. Gov. Jerry Brown backs the changes but admits potential legal problems” escaped my notice for a day. But it’s epochal: It points out the clear path to the bullet train’s demise. Sharp attorneys hired by well-heeled opponents of the project — whether they are cities in the Silicon Valley, the Howard Jarvis Taxpayers Association or Central Valley agribusiness, or all three in tandem — are going to kill this dead in court, using the incredibly specific provisions in Proposition 1A exactly as they were intended: to prevent a boondoggle. Hip hip hooray!

A series of concessions over the last year to quiet opposition to the California bullet train has created a potentially lethal problem: the revised blueprint for the system may violate requirements locked into state law when voters approved funding for the project in 2008.

The Legislature packed the law with an unusual number of conditions intended to reassure voters, protect the project from later political compromises and ensure that it would not end up a bankrupted white elephant.

But many of those requirements may be at odds with the plan to integrate bullet trains with existing commuter rail lines in Los Angeles and San Francisco. …

Outside critics, state oversight boards, some legislators and former officials of the California High-Speed Rail Authority say the compromises violate those requirements …

The story quotes Jerry Brown as being dismissive of the possibility that a judge might block construction if he found Prop. 1A was being violated, but that is just laughable. That’s because we’re not talking about the state trying to finesse the rules. The rail authority wants to obliterate them:

The mandates in the law are considerable.
- They require that any initial segment has to use high-speed trains.
- Money for each operating segment needs to be in hand before construction starts.
- Passengers must be able to board in Los Angeles and arrive in San Francisco without changing trains.
- As many as 12 trains per hour are supposed to run in each direction
- and the system has to operate without taxpayer subsidies.

Instead, the rail authority has agreed to run fewer trains at slower speeds on tracks shared with commuter rail systems, Amtrack and freight trains. In the early years, passengers will probably have to transfer trains to get from one end of the system to the other. The concept, known as the blended approach, was pushed last year by Bay Area politicians, who fought the original plan to run high-speed trains through the region on 60-foot high viaducts over local neighborhoods. The idea has attracted support in Southern California as well.

What’s funny about this is that the same Legislature that wrote all these specific provisions into the law wrote the ballot summary that bamboozled voters in 2008.  It was so outrageously slanted that it led to a Howard Jarvis lawsuit that prompted a state appeals court to essentially block lawmakers from ever again writing ballot descriptions.

So on the one hand, they were duplicitous scumbags manipulating us into voting for $9.95 billion in bond seed money for the project. But on the other hand, they were careful watchdogs who built in safeguards to protect us … from they themselves?

What a deliciously strange twist.

Kings County is already suing the rail authority for noncompliance with 1A. And Jon Coupal, president of Howard Jarvis, is ready to jump in.

“We don’t see how these bonds could ever be issued with such a significant legal cloud hanging over them,” he wrote in an email to me. “In addition to the existing legal challenges, it is likely that multiple parties would jump into any validation action filed by the state seeking to inoculate the financing. Wall Street itself may demand that the issue be revisited by the voters.”

That’s a great point. Not even Kamala Harris, our Mussolini fan of an attorney general, is going to be able to make this train run on time, or ever.

Woo. Hoo.
"The worst form of inequality is to try to make unequal things equal." -- Aristotle

sirs

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Re: Solyndra.....x7
« Reply #2 on: March 31, 2012, 02:34:35 PM »
High-speed rail may be only $59 billion short. Yeah, that’ll work

Apparently desperate to get spending underway on the California High-Speed Rail project, Gov. Jerry Brown has dramatically cut how much it will cost.

No longer will the train cost $89 billion more than state taxpayers have to pay for it. Now it’ll be only $59 billion short.

Yeah, that’s like saying you will drown in only 59 feet of water instead of the deep end – 89 feet.

The Sacramento Bee is reporting that the lower price has been arrived at, as if that should sell the idea. But remember when they pitched this boondoggle in the beginning in 2008? It was supposed to cost only $33 billion.

Even then, all Californians supposedly would pay was the cost of $9.95 billion in bonds that would  siphon taxes from the general fund for decades. Yeah, the same general fund that’s $9 billion in the red – again.

So, why is it supposed to cost less? Because the latest revision of this scheme won’t exactly be high-speed rail all the way. Apparently it will zip through places like Modesto. But then slow once it reaches places like Los Angeles. That accomodation was to lure politicos in congested areas to support the plan, in return for “blending” the high-speed concept with their decidedly slower existing metropolitan rail systems.

If this sounds like a bribe,  it should. It  meets the definition: “money or favor given or promised in order to influence the judgment or conduct of a person in a position of trust”

Your “trusted” local politicians are being bribed with money from the high-speed rail system to jump aboard this bad idea. The payoff comes from “sharing” some of the high-speed rail’s booty to “improve” the local lines.

Everybody gets something. Certainly the crony capitalists who will belly up to the trough to get fat contracts from those billions. Remember, they will get paid whether the  train ends  up operational, or not.

And none of this affects  a few realities:
1. It is unrealistic to think the train will operate in the black.
2. The initiative approved in 2008 requires it to operate without taxpayer subsidies.
3. Ridership studies that claim it can be profitable are wishful thinking at best.
4. Voters approved a high-speed rail, not a mostly high-speed rail.

And the harshest reality of all:

The boondoggle still would be $59 billion short of what they say (now) it will cost to build it.

Maybe they can borrow from some of the public union retirement funds.

Brown wants the Legislature to approve selling $2.7 billion of those  bonds soon. That would be ludicrous on its face, except for one thing. The Legislature is controlled  by people like Brown, which is why the state budget is $9 billion in the red and public union retirement funds already  are under funded.

All aboard?
"The worst form of inequality is to try to make unequal things equal." -- Aristotle