If anyone wants to know just how hundreds of millions of transit dollars just "disappeared" they need to know just how Chicago (and Illinois) work.
Here's an example:
The chief judge in Lake County Illinois (one county north of Chicago and where my house is) was pulled over and arrested for drunk driving.
The chief judge in Lake County Illinois is a cousin to the mayor of Chicago. (Mayor Daley, A.K.A. "King Richard II")
Two police officers participated in the arrest. Amazingly, the video cameras in both their cars "malfunctioned" and there is no video to document the judge's condition.
More amazingly, the officer who made the initial stop just passed away from a "heart attack" at age 42.
Amazingly, people can get a lot done if they loot a transit budget for hundreds of millions of dollars and put that money to their own use.
greyhounds wrote: This will be shruged off as business as usual in Chicago. Having spent most of my life around The Windy City, I suspect that the money was simply looted. http://www.chicagotribune.com/news/local/chi-cta-block37-webjun12,0,3643712.storySo the CTA "creatively" gets rid of millions of dollars and all that's left is a hole in the ground that was there already. Sorry to have to agree, but the story definitely has a made-in-Chicago flavor to it. And begging the issue, but weren't the blue and orange lines meant to take people to O'Hare and Midway, respectively? Gotten so the Blue Line is hardly worth taking. I can't fathom the amount of land that would have to be taken to speed up the process significantly. There was always a vagueness about this project from the git-go, at least according to what I've read and heard. - a. s.
This will be shruged off as business as usual in Chicago. Having spent most of my life around The Windy City, I suspect that the money was simply looted.
http://www.chicagotribune.com/news/local/chi-cta-block37-webjun12,0,3643712.story
So the CTA "creatively" gets rid of millions of dollars and all that's left is a hole in the ground that was there already. Sorry to have to agree, but the story definitely has a made-in-Chicago flavor to it.
And begging the issue, but weren't the blue and orange lines meant to take people to O'Hare and Midway, respectively? Gotten so the Blue Line is hardly worth taking. I can't fathom the amount of land that would have to be taken to speed up the process significantly. There was always a vagueness about this project from the git-go, at least according to what I've read and heard. - a. s.
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