QUOTE: Originally posted by Paul Milenkovic If the social goal of the subsidy is to provide an accomodation for people unable or unwilling to drive, fine. If the social goal is to encourage people to substitute the train for driving to save on energy, the energy savings need to be demonstrated and quantified.
QUOTE: Finally, your theorem does not mention the abject pleasures of not having to drive, or sit in crappy, stop-and-go traffic. Or the peace of arriving at one's destination without the frayed nerve endings caused by being surrounded by people driving like idiots at 80 mph for many hours.
If GM "killed the electric car", what am I doing standing next to an EV-1, a half a block from the WSOR tracks?
QUOTE: Originally posted by Poppa_Zit Among others, these Amtrak routes in Illinois serve a lot of college kids,
QUOTE: Originally posted by Paul Milenkovic A common theme is that with gas $3, $4, $5 dollars a gallon, we will all need the trains. Amtrak's "gas mileage" had been reported as around 50 passenger miles per gallon but more recent numbers show it going down to around 30 passenger miles per gallon as of late. On that basis alone, two people sharing a fuel-efficient car can do better than Amtrak.
Nothing is more fairly distributed than common sense: no one thinks he needs more of it than he already has.
QUOTE: Originally posted by greyhounds Oh Christ Jay! I just got a $6,400 property tax bill. On top of my state income tax, the sales tax, the phone tax, the electricity tax, the freaking highway tolls... They take enough. They just don't spend it wisely. But hey, they built the White Sox a new ballpark and the Bears a new stadium. Funding these stupid trains is like going out to dinner when you can't pay your mortgage. It might only be a small part of the money, but it's a large part of the irresponsibility. Most Illinois residents won't even know those extra trains exist; or ever be in a position to use them. The people who use trains like this should pay for the trains. To paraphrase a late Illinois senator: "A million here, a million there, pretty soon you're talking real money." And Poppa_Zit (?), I ain't no teacher. The only connection I have (since I gradgyated) with the Illinois public education system is that I help pay for it. For everybody's FYI, the "average" pay for a high school teacher in Downers Grove, IL was $74,000 (with about 2 1/2 months off in the summer time, full benifits, good retirement, etc. How'd you like that nice job.) That was the last year I lived in DG. You know what, they went on strike for more money. Now just where was that "more money" gonna' come from? Please see my aforementioned property tax bill.
"We have met the enemy and he is us." Pogo Possum "We have met the anemone... and he is Russ." Bucky Katt "Prediction is very difficult, especially if it's about the future." Niels Bohr, Nobel laureate in physics
QUOTE: Originally posted by jeaton Illinois is adding $12 million to bring the total for the Amtrak regionals to $24 million. That includes covering the full payment of their share of the Chicago-Milwaukee service, which Wisconsin would otherwise have to cover. I shouldn't call Illinois taxpayers a bunch of cheapskates. After all, I was one for over 2o years. Anyway, let's suppose they dump the whole $24 million into the $19 billion pension shortfall. Gee!! That would get the pension fixed in 791 years. On the other hand Illinois might actually want to consider deriving a little more revenue from taxes.
QUOTE: Originally posted by greyhounds As an Illinois reseident, all I can say is I guess we have the state government we deserve. There's no money to pay for those new trains, and they are not needed. There's certainly no justification for them. This is from USA Today: "...The Illinois Teachers Retirement System, which pays Haven's benefits, is typical of a troubled system. The pension fund had $32 billion in stocks, bonds and other assets at the end of its 2004 fiscal year, but it needed $51 billion to cover its long-term obligations to 158,000 educators still working and 77,000 retirees. Illinois taxpayers are responsible for the $19 billion in unfunded teacher pensions, plus $15 billion more to cover pension obligations to university employees and other state employees. These amounts are what Illinois needs to set aside immediately — tucked in a pension fund and earning investment returns of 8% a year — to make the system solvent. Instead, Illinois legislators plan to forgo $1 billion in annual pension payments in fiscal 2006 and 2007, so they can spend money on more immediate needs." I have news for the legislature - meeting your legal obligation to fund a pension plan trumps expanding anything discretionary. This is a bad joke - they're not funding the teachers' pension plan - what do they think will happen when Miss Swartz finishes her 30 years in the classroom and expects her pension check. The money they have wasted on these new and unecessary trains will be gone. The full story is at: http://www.usatoday.com/money/perfi/retirement/2006-01-16-pension-funds_x.htm
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