Wednesday, October 29, 2008

Arnold Endorses Prop 1A

NOTE: We've moved! Visit us at the California High Speed Rail Blog.

I know there had been some doubt among the HSR deniers about Arnold's position, but as KQED's John Myers reports he is indeed endorsing Yes on 1A.

Arnold spoke at the Commonwealth Club last month and explained his support for high speed rail:

There is far more economic opportunity in fighting global warming than economic risk....We shouldn't let the budget crisis hold back good things for the future. 20 years from now you can't look back and say "well they had a budget crisis so we didn't do it." Just because we had a problem with the budget does not mean that people should vote "no" on high speed rail. Our rail system in America is so old, we're driving the same speed as 100 years ago, the same system as 100 years ago. We should modernize, we should do what other countries do...We should start in this state, we should show leadership.

It would be nice if he would actually get out and do some campaigning for it. That goes for the rest of you California political leaders.

1 comment:

Anonymous said...

"The most expensive bond measure on any state ballot this year"...and since Arnold just announced we're $10B in the whole already since the budget passed, what's wrong with doubling down?

http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=20601103&sid=aBVL1ANW_buw&refer=us

California's High-Speed Rail Dream May Face Defeat on Nov. 4

By Adam Satariano

Oct. 30 (Bloomberg) -- A 12-year push to link San Francisco and Los Angeles with a high-speed train may fall victim to voters' economic concerns in the cash-strapped state and the deadliest U.S. passenger rail accident in 15 years.

When backers last year chose to ask voters to approve an initiative authorizing the state to borrow $10 billion to build a statewide system that reduces rail travel time from Los Angeles to San Francisco to 2 hours, 38 minutes, the promise to cut congestion and help the environment made it seem like a winner among voters.

Then a budget fight left the state without a spending plan for the first 11 weeks of the fiscal year, a record for lawmakers in the state capital Sacramento. Turmoil in the credit markets compounded California's economic woes, with Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger saying this week that education spending may need to be cut by up to $4 billion.

``When the economy is not well, it's a little harder to talk about the project,'' said Mehdi Morshed, executive director of the California High-Speed Rail Authority, the state agency created in 1996 to plan the rail line. Private polls suggest ``diminishing support'' for the measure as the economy has worsened, he said.

The Nov. 4 vote has been years in the making. Plans to put the measure on the ballot in 2004 were scrapped by lawmakers over concerns it would impair state finances. In 2006, it was put aside because it would have competed with another public works measure.

Costliest Bond Measure

The $10 billion high-speed train project is Supported by Schwarzenegger, an advocate for reducing greenhouse-gas emissions, it would let people travel in less than three hours the 432 miles between San Francisco and Los Angeles for an estimated $55.

In addition, the rail would reach Sacramento, San Jose, Fresno, Burbank, Ontario and San Diego. On Sept. 12, a Los Angeles collision between a passenger and freight train killed 25 people, the most fatalities in a U.S. passenger rail accident in 15 years.

Morshed said the high-speed train is designed to avoid those types of collisions because the rail line would be separated from other forms of traffic and automated controls will be used to avoid human error.

If approved, the bond money would pay for half the estimated construction costs for the rail line, while additional cash from the federal government and private investors would cover the rest. Rail officials would be required to get private matching funds before the public bond money could be spent.

Morshed said pension funds such as the California Public Employees' Retirement System, the biggest public pension fund in the U.S., will be targeted as investors in the project.

The fund last year created a new inflation-linked asset class where it set aside 5 percent of its holdings for investments in infrastructure such as roads, bridges and power plants.

But strain in the financial markets now makes this ``not an ideal environment'' to ask voters to approve $10 billion in new debt, said Sean Randolph, president of the Bay Area Council's Economic Institute, a supporter of the project.

Democratic Support

The rail initiative, Proposition 1A, does enjoy the support of the state Democratic Party, who officials say account for 43.9 percent of the state's registered voters, supporters note.

And the economic concerns may be outweighed by the long-term potential for the project, Randolph said. Supporters say the project will create about 160,000 new construction-related jobs and 450,000 permanent jobs.

Because of reduced traffic, the rail would cut carbon-dioxide emissions in California by 12 billion pounds annually by 2020, supporters said.

``This is a project that will carry us for decades,'' Randolph said. ``Hopefully voters will see it that way.''

To contact the reporter on this story: Adam Satariano in San Francisco at asatariano1@bloomberg.net

Last Updated: October 30, 2008 13:46 EDT