The Chron is covering yet another audit report on the ballooning costs of Jerry Brown's train to nowhere.
Pushing to break ground on California’s high-speed rail project before critical planning for the Central Valley line was in place drove up its cost by $600 million, with that “flawed decision” potentially increasing the price tag by another $1 billion, state Auditor Elaine Howle said Thursday.
And more financial problems are looming for high-speed rail. The state could lose $3.5 billion in federal grant money if the first segment of the line is not completed by December 2022 as planned, Howle warned in a report. The auditor’s office said to meet that deadline, the pace of construction must double over the next four years.
Incoming Gov. Newsom will have an early decision to make come January as he has a number of other big ticket items on his plate of promises. And his dilemma is how to split this baby
Gov.-elect Gavin Newsom has been less enthusiastic about high-speed rail than Brown, saying he would focus on completing the portion from the San Joaquin Valley to the Bay Area before deciding whether to make a push to Los Angeles.
Assemblyman Jim Patterson, R-Fresno, a critic of the rail project, said the report shows that high-speed rail is “dead in the water.” “There will never be a completed track from the Bay Area to Los Angeles,” Patterson said. “This project cannot be revived in its current state, and this audit is further proof that the best we can hope for is a rump railroad running from Bakersfield to Madera.”
The problem is a "rump railroad" – great term which I will adopt– is not what the original Proposition promised and thus likely illegal. It's really time to stop pouring good money after bad and dump the rump. Will Gavin have the guts to do it?


Leave a Reply