monrails are better than trains.... per modern marvels. I suppose it's true, take charlotte for example they just built their light rail system. a monorail would have cost around 1/4 less and be safer.... it blew my mind, but makes sense. MONO-RAil! *cue music*
2/3/2010 5:00:43 PM
1) Truth -> NCDOT Pet project ...2) We've already spent $300 million with very little to show for. I don't see how another $545 million will produce anything tangible.3) I love my car.
2/3/2010 5:01:24 PM
2/3/2010 5:11:19 PM
2/3/2010 5:57:55 PM
Yeah, I'm curious about this monorail thing as well. I can't understand how for intercity travel, a monorail would be cheaper both in laying down new track as well as maintaining it.
2/3/2010 11:25:00 PM
what is there to maintain. its just one indestructable rail. the train is what you maintain.
2/3/2010 11:32:38 PM
I like this map because you can easily connect the dots, in terms of population mounds, down the NE coast, through DC & Richmond, through that majestic city known to all who behold it as Raleigh-Durham, down to Charlotte, on to Atlanta Georgia, and to the next state down Florida which is full of populations centers all vertically lined up. The only downside is this is a 1990 map, so surely many of those areas have grown in the past 2 decades. It also notes that "Coastal areas are home to over half of the U.S. Population"http://www.visualizingeconomics.com/wp-content/uploads/ams-usa-population.png
2/4/2010 2:08:06 AM
^ Yep. someone should probably build a highway, or maybe a rail freight line... Oh right, they already have. Well, then, stop wasting money building what has already been built in other ways. Maybe use 0.01% of the money you were going to use for high-speed rail and instead run express bus service which will be almost as fast, far more energy efficient, and a tiny fraction of the cost.
2/4/2010 2:34:36 AM
http://www.visualizingeconomics.com/wp-content/uploads/ams-usa-population.pngYeah, old map. RDU has surpassed the density of Minneapolis as of 2008... and it's continuing to grow.
2/4/2010 10:00:03 AM
Considering Charlotte knocked it out of the park with the lightrail, if they have half the success of the lightrail it would be worth it.
2/4/2010 11:45:41 PM
^Knocked it out of the park? Citizens were so fed up with the cost over-runs they launched a ballot referendum to kill the construction project.
2/5/2010 10:28:09 AM
2/8/2010 6:55:41 PM
2/8/2010 9:00:09 PM
^ In that you mean it lost less money than they thought it would? Well done, you manage to not bankrupt the city, a huge success! We should all copy it! [/sarcasm]
2/8/2010 11:26:43 PM
^^lol^pretty muchShow me a rail system in the US that isn't in the red on a yearly basis outside of the NYC subway system and I'll show you a liar.
2/8/2010 11:47:39 PM
2/9/2010 12:03:01 AM
Reduced traffic and parking such as building another road and parking deck, which would have cost less money and had more of an impact? Oh, and turned a profit for the government through gasoline taxes?
2/9/2010 7:18:59 AM
You guys are so short-sided. First off gasoline taxes would be a broken window, secondly by putting in a parking deck you prevent other businesses from operating downtown and artificially push up real estate prices higher than they need to be. The government can get additional taxes off of that building, it's tenants, and their employees.
2/9/2010 8:36:12 AM
^explain to me why the train runs only till 1:30am. Why the hell would you stop running the train 30 minutes before the bars close. Is it to increase revenue through DUI tickets?And please, let us know when the whole project turns a profit.
2/9/2010 9:04:27 AM
Most of the people I know from Charlotte were against it, until it happened, and now they're happy with it. Some who opposed it originally even voted for McCrory for governor because he did that in Charlotte.
2/9/2010 1:21:14 PM
I'd be happy to use it, but all the money its costing them...yeah not so much.
2/9/2010 1:22:16 PM
A better high-speed rail network would definitely be put to use by business travelers for trips less than 500 miles or so. As someone who takes 75-100 flights a year, trains are a much more pleasant way to travel. I used to live in the northeast and took trains quite often between philly and DC/NYC/Boston, wish i had that luxury now that i'm in Atlanta. I have co-workers with projects in Charlotte, Greenville, Jacksonville, RDU etc who fly every week who would use the hell out of high-speed rail (or even few-stop 86 mph rail). So while this service may not make sense for most of the population, I think enough people would use it for it to be in the black. As major population centers in the south continue to grow, at some point we're going to have to look for transportation alternatives to cars, as we can't continue to invest in widening freeways forever.
2/9/2010 1:41:27 PM
Increased density does not make a train profitable. Hell, the New York Subway system operated with a $1.2 billion deficit in 2008. Trains in today's world cannot turn a profit, they have too much competition from buses, airplanes, and cars. From an engineering perspective, trains are simply terrible at transporting people.
2/9/2010 5:04:12 PM
2/9/2010 7:06:19 PM
Privatization. The unionized workforce will go away, replaced with lower paid better drivers (as occurred when Britain privatized its bus system, since bad drivers can now be fired). Some train lines will be abandoned or have schedules cut back. At the same time, the number of bus routes will explode, including express door-to-door bus service, combining with denser schedules, as the number of competing bus lines grows. As the bus system becomes more competitive with the automobile, drivers will leave their cars, causing a virtuous cycle: as the demand for bus traffic increases, the bus network gets even more convenient to use, causing even more demand. The average daily commute should fall from its current 2.5 hours, each way, to a more reasonable 1.5 hours. The exact opposite of what happened when Santiago nationalized its bus system. "Planning Order, Causing Chaos: Transantiago", by Michael Munger. Econlib, September 1, 2008. Curb Rights: A Foundation for Free Enterprise in Urban Transit, by Daniel B. Klein, Adrian Moore, and Binyam Reja
2/9/2010 10:23:50 PM
^ is this synopsis in reference to a better option to the NYC subway system? If that's the case, you have obviously never driven in Manhattan, Brooklyn, or the Bronx to believe that a bus system would ever win out over the subway there....
2/9/2010 11:05:07 PM
The government isn't a for profit enterprise, it is to provide public goods (without excluding the poor), create positive externalities for its citizens, and create infrastructure.
2/9/2010 11:32:15 PM
2/9/2010 11:43:56 PM
2/9/2010 11:58:12 PM
Yes I have. And like most cities, the heavy automobile traffic that is getting in the way of bus traffic is caused by the inept bus service. We saw this in Santiago: when the bus system was nationalized, the people took to their cars. While the traffic was already bad, since the city wasted all its money on the light-rail line and neglected even basic road maintenance, the city ground to a halt under a wave of new automobile traffic. As you can see in New York, the taxi is a major means of transportation, which is absurd. In Santiago, the city had a very small taxi fleet, thanks to good bus service. However, taxi service exploded after nationalization as inept bus service became a poor substitute for cars/taxis. [Edited on February 10, 2010 at 11:05 AM. Reason : .,.]
2/10/2010 11:03:18 AM
2/10/2010 11:41:43 AM
NC needs a fresh corruption injection.
2/10/2010 11:45:17 AM
^^ i'm not knocking the privatization idea, i'm knocking the idea that a huge bus system would be the result....[Edited on February 10, 2010 at 12:35 PM. Reason : .]
2/10/2010 12:35:06 PM
2/10/2010 12:59:52 PM
2/10/2010 1:14:17 PM
^^no, all things being said we the tax payers will never break even on these rail projects. If you like deficit spending and debt well then good for you. With developing a rail system in a city and expanding the rail and capacity you'll always be pushing the cart in front of the hourse, financially speaking. If you want to use NYC as an example they've had subways for over 100 years, run a deficiti budget, and are in the process of constructing several new extensions and even one entire new line. If you think they'll break even and make money after all that's done you're out of your mind.Don't make the mistake that I don't think light rail is a good way to get around in a large city. It is, but unfortunately the cost is ridiculous and is something you can't overcome.A large bus system could very well happen if more people took to the trains from their cars freeing up road space. A kind of funny secondary result. As it stands now several bus routes in the city are very efficient at getting people around. And as far as taxis I would have taken a taxi at almost every opportunity presented if I could afford it. $40/day in transportation fees was too rich for my blood though.[Edited on February 10, 2010 at 1:19 PM. Reason : k]
2/10/2010 1:15:15 PM
Everything im reading about Santiago seems to prefer the newer "nationalized" system.http://info.worldbank.org/etools/docs/library/64610/urbanbus_comp.pdfpage 5
2/10/2010 7:40:42 PM
2/10/2010 7:42:59 PM
2/10/2010 8:34:47 PM
2/10/2010 9:01:33 PM
That's very difficult to calculate. To we count just ticket sales? Or do we go down to the lower number of policemen we have to have on the road due to people riding the train? Do we count the increase tax revenue from businesses that get larger income from nearby train stops? Do we count increase property taxes to new condos that spring up around the train? You folks seem to easily be able to state that the train is heavily subsidized, but there are several benefits that I am certain are not being counted
2/10/2010 11:32:45 PM
2/11/2010 3:50:54 AM
^ True, if the demand is not there or if the private bus companies for whatever reason are discouraged from being so, then the system will not be all that. Maybe the system worked so well in Santiago because there were absolutely no rules whatsoever, combined with the relative poverty of the country pricing automobiles out of most people's reach. Maybe we Americans are so wealthy we would rather drive even confronted with a great mass transit system. Which means, of course, if riders will refuse to ride the bus even in Osaka, then why the fuck does anyone think they will ride the Train in Charlotte?
2/11/2010 9:32:44 AM
2/11/2010 6:02:23 PM
2/11/2010 6:18:09 PM
http://www.newsobserver.com/home/story/308621.html
2/14/2010 6:04:11 PM
2/15/2010 12:04:25 AM
2/15/2010 1:33:16 AM
Trains AND nuclear reactors... now all he has to do is introduce the Euro to make us fully communist.
2/16/2010 5:51:31 PM
^so you're hoping for a communist style Chernobyl incident? The US's labeling of this as "high speed" rail is laughable, though I suppose a step in the right direction. What is it, 30-40 year old technology we're trying to apply?[Edited on February 16, 2010 at 8:48 PM. Reason : k]
2/16/2010 8:48:44 PM