The Columbus Dispatch

Will California’s bullet train be derailed?

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Alittle over a decade ago, when California’s bullet train was still a dream on paper, its backers promised that the nation’s first true high-speed rail system would transform the way we travel and yield significan­t economic rewards for the state. They laid out a vision of innovation and progress and promised a continuati­on of California’s long history of leading America into the future.

Now, however, the project is stuck — partially built, with billions of dollars spent — without sufficient political support or financial backing to guarantee it will ever be completed. That’s not just bad news for those of us who had hoped for fast, convenient, eco-friendly commutes up and down California, but it also raises questions about whether California, much less the United States, will ever be able to build the modern infrastruc­ture this country needs.

The most recent blow to the bullet-train project involved the most myopic and trivial of political battles.

On Tuesday the Trump administra­tion announced it would cancel $949 million in promised federal funds for the rail-line constructi­on and try to force California to return $2.5 billion already paid.

The announceme­nt came a day after Gov. Gavin Newsom announced that California and 15 other states had filed a lawsuit to block President Trump’s nonsensica­l declaratio­n of a national emergency so he can fund his border wall.

Of course the move to revoke rail funding is retaliatio­n for the lawsuit. Trump himself made that clear with a tweet Tuesday asserting: “The failed Fast Train project in California, where the cost overruns are becoming world record-setting, is hundreds of times more expensive than the desperatel­y needed Wall!”

But this is more than typical Trump bluster. It appears that the Federal Railroad Administra­tion does have some authority to demand repayment if the state fails to make reasonable progress on the project.

And Newsom has played right into Trump’s spiteful little hands with his mixed messages on the project. Newsom tried to have it both ways, first declaring in his State of the State speech last week that there “simply isn’t a path” to complete the rail line from Los Angeles to San Francisco, and then declaring he was fully committed to building the entire project. His wishy-washy statements left the very real impression that California might never get the highspeed-rail service that voters approved at the ballot in 2008.

Is this how California’s ambitious bullet train will ultimately be derailed? By a petty president and a noncommitt­al governor?

It’s a tragedy that highspeed rail is being strangled by small-mindedness and short-term thinking, when climate change demands ambitious, visionary projects to end our dependence on fossil fuels.

Yet the bullet train has been plagued by such missteps from the beginning. Its proponents vastly oversimpli­fied the complexiti­es of the project and dramatical­ly underestim­ated the costs. The once $33 billion project is now estimated to cost $100 billion to complete. Propositio­n 1A, approved in 2008, put unrealisti­c restrictio­ns on the project.

How can the United States rise to meet the challenges posed by climate change and continue to be a leader in economic and technologi­cal innovation if it can’t rise above personal squabbles and local politics to build a single high-speed-rail line from the south to the north of this state?

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