Transportation
			Blog				
			
		Private Sector High Speed Rail Moves Forward While State Bullet Train Cost Estimates Climb
			It has been called a dud, the train that couldn’t, a train that went off the rails, a train wreck, the train to nowhere, and a crazy train. The high-speed rail is also a financial fiasco, its cost now almost four times the initial estimate Californians based their votes on ...		
					
					
			
																				
			Kerry Jackson		
				
																						
			March 14, 2023		
				
					
			Blog				
			
		Mass transit in America: Pipedream or possibility?
			A few years ago, when I taught at a university for a term in China, we lived in Changsha, a city of 7.5 million people. Because we didn’t have a car, we depended upon public transportation to get away from our campus and shop downtown. Especially attractive was the gleaming ...		
					
					
			
																				
			William L. Anderson		
				
																						
			February 15, 2023		
				
					
			Blog				
			
		California Chooses Flashy Projects Over Quality Transit
			(Image Courtesy California High-Speed Rail Authority) Do California government officials want more public transit riders? If the decades-long decline of even local public transit ridership or the state’s continued funding of its infamous $113 billion and counting fantasy train from Los Angeles to San Francisco is any indication, the answer ...		
					
					
			
																				
			Kenneth Schrupp		
				
																						
			February 9, 2023		
				
					
			Blog				
			
		San Diego Fires Latest Salvo in Government’s War on Cars
			Not too long ago, San Diego was, if not a haven of conservatism with a libertarian flavor, at least a break from the stifling progressivism of Los Angeles. It’s becoming increasingly more difficult to tell the differences between, though. The latest shift to the left: San Diego is at war ...		
					
					
			
																				
			Kerry Jackson		
				
																						
			February 8, 2023		
				
					
			Blog				
			
		Latest Reasons Why Residents Continue to Flee San Francisco
			“Budget shortfalls pose an existential threat” to the “long-term viability” of transit services across the state. “Bay Area operators,” says a group of six state senators and seven assembly members, “face significant annual shortfalls,” leaving agencies such as BART no choice but “to cut multiple lines of service as early ...		
					
					
			
																				
			Kerry Jackson		
				
																						
			January 31, 2023		
				
					
			Blog				
			
		Private options could reverse transit ridership drops
			One way to measure a city’s greatness is the ease of getting around: Does its public transit system improve or undermine its quality of life? In the 20th century, New York, London, Paris, Chicago, Berlin and Chicago were generally held in high regard for efficiently and quickly moving people through ...		
					
					
			
																				
			Kerry Jackson		
				
																						
			January 26, 2023		
				
					
			Blog				
			
		Bullet train won’t improve urban transportation
			(image courtesy California High-Speed Rail Commission) Even on its best day, California’s high-speed rail project was always going to struggle to deliver on its grandiose promises – a best day that was unfortunately Nov. 4, 2008. That was the day California voters approved a modest and fantastical version of what ...		
					
					
			
																				
			Matthew Fleming		
				
																						
			January 19, 2023		
				
					
			Blog				
			
		Urban flight: Removing cars won’t revive our cities
			As happened in the 1960s and 70s, America is witnessing a great exodus from some, but not all, of its cities. This time, even West Coast cities, with their sublime weather and ports on the Pacific Ocean, also are seeing residents flee paradise. According to U.S. Census Bureau data, in ...		
					
					
			
																				
			John Seiler		
				
																						
			January 11, 2023		
				
					
			Blog				
			
		Another San Francisco Treat
			The network is in such straits that local transit agencies are looking at a grim scenario in which BART cancels weekend service and closes “nine stations just to keep the lights on elsewhere,” the San Francisco Chronicle reports. When they do run, trains won’t arrive in 15-minute intervals – instead ...		
					
					
			
																				
			Kerry Jackson		
				
																						
			December 5, 2022		
				
					
			Blog				
			
		Pothole vigilantes fill in for the government’s failure
			One of my favorite movies is “Brazil,” by the Monty Python comedy troupe’s alum Terry Gilliam. In the most-telling scene, Harry Tuttle, played by Robert De Niro, breaks into an apartment, not to rob it, but to fix a broken air conditioning system. That’s because the vast government bureaucracy, Central ...		
					
					
			
																				
			John Seiler		
				
																						
			November 9, 2022		
				
					Private Sector High Speed Rail Moves Forward While State Bullet Train Cost Estimates Climb
			It has been called a dud, the train that couldn’t, a train that went off the rails, a train wreck, the train to nowhere, and a crazy train. The high-speed rail is also a financial fiasco, its cost now almost four times the initial estimate Californians based their votes on ...		
					Mass transit in America: Pipedream or possibility?
			A few years ago, when I taught at a university for a term in China, we lived in Changsha, a city of 7.5 million people. Because we didn’t have a car, we depended upon public transportation to get away from our campus and shop downtown. Especially attractive was the gleaming ...		
					California Chooses Flashy Projects Over Quality Transit
			(Image Courtesy California High-Speed Rail Authority) Do California government officials want more public transit riders? If the decades-long decline of even local public transit ridership or the state’s continued funding of its infamous $113 billion and counting fantasy train from Los Angeles to San Francisco is any indication, the answer ...		
					San Diego Fires Latest Salvo in Government’s War on Cars
			Not too long ago, San Diego was, if not a haven of conservatism with a libertarian flavor, at least a break from the stifling progressivism of Los Angeles. It’s becoming increasingly more difficult to tell the differences between, though. The latest shift to the left: San Diego is at war ...		
					Latest Reasons Why Residents Continue to Flee San Francisco
			“Budget shortfalls pose an existential threat” to the “long-term viability” of transit services across the state. “Bay Area operators,” says a group of six state senators and seven assembly members, “face significant annual shortfalls,” leaving agencies such as BART no choice but “to cut multiple lines of service as early ...		
					Private options could reverse transit ridership drops
			One way to measure a city’s greatness is the ease of getting around: Does its public transit system improve or undermine its quality of life? In the 20th century, New York, London, Paris, Chicago, Berlin and Chicago were generally held in high regard for efficiently and quickly moving people through ...		
					Bullet train won’t improve urban transportation
			(image courtesy California High-Speed Rail Commission) Even on its best day, California’s high-speed rail project was always going to struggle to deliver on its grandiose promises – a best day that was unfortunately Nov. 4, 2008. That was the day California voters approved a modest and fantastical version of what ...		
					Urban flight: Removing cars won’t revive our cities
			As happened in the 1960s and 70s, America is witnessing a great exodus from some, but not all, of its cities. This time, even West Coast cities, with their sublime weather and ports on the Pacific Ocean, also are seeing residents flee paradise. According to U.S. Census Bureau data, in ...		
					Another San Francisco Treat
			The network is in such straits that local transit agencies are looking at a grim scenario in which BART cancels weekend service and closes “nine stations just to keep the lights on elsewhere,” the San Francisco Chronicle reports. When they do run, trains won’t arrive in 15-minute intervals – instead ...		
					Pothole vigilantes fill in for the government’s failure
			One of my favorite movies is “Brazil,” by the Monty Python comedy troupe’s alum Terry Gilliam. In the most-telling scene, Harry Tuttle, played by Robert De Niro, breaks into an apartment, not to rob it, but to fix a broken air conditioning system. That’s because the vast government bureaucracy, Central ...		
					