Posted November 26, 2013
Landowners
in California's Central Valley
have delivered a death blow to President Obama's signature transportation
project.
Conn
Carroll | Nov 26, 2013
California
Gov. Jerry Brown can not spend state bond revenues on President Obama's
signature transportation project until the state can identify how they will pay
for the entire $68 billion project, a
California court ruled Monday. The decision almost certainly spells death
for the project.
This
August, Superior Court Judge Michael Kenny ruled
that the California High Speed Rail Authority (CHSRA) “abused its discretion by
approving a funding plan that did not comply with the requirements of the
law."
That
law would be Proposition 1A (the “Safe, Reliable, High-Speed Passenger Train
Bond Act for the 21st Century”), which required the CHSRA to identify “sources
of all funds to be invested in the corridor” and complete “all necessary
project level environmental clearances” before construction can begin.
At
the time, Democrats sold Obama's high-speed rail plan as a $40 billion project.
But that number quickly skyrocketed to more than $100 billion, after California voters
approved it, of course.
The
CHSRA then scaled the project back down (by cutting most of its high-speed
capabilities in metro San Francisco and Los Angeles) to just $68
billion, where it is today.
Through
his failed stimulus law, Obama gave California
more than $3 billion for the train, and the California legislature has approved more
than $10 billion in bonds. But that still leaves more than $50 billion unfunded
and the CHSRA has no plans on how to fill that gap.
In
August, Judge Kenny declined to invalidate a separate legislative appropriation
for the project, but he left open the possibility that he could forbid the
state from spending bond proceeds until the came up with a full funding plan.
That is exactly what Judge Kenny did Monday.
California
is still free to spend the $3 billion that Obama gave them on the project, but
after that, the CHSRA will be broke.
It
is unlikely California
voters will approve more money for the project. A recent Los
Angeles Times poll found that 52 percent of Californians now oppose Obama's
bullet train entirely.
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