Posts Tagged ‘Transportation’

Governor, DOT Yet to Turn Over Records Regarding Oconomowoc Station Decision

[Madison, Wisc...] Wisconsin Governor Jim Doyle and the State’s Department of Transportation have yet to respond to a simple and straightforward open records request regarding the so-called Milwaukee to Madison high speed rail line. The John K. MacIver Institute for Public Policy is investigating the events surrounding the abrupt cancellation of the Oconomowoc train station.

Last month, DOT officials notified the City of Oconomowoc that their city was no longer being considered for a stop on the controversial passenger rail line.  On August 19th, MacIver filed formal records requests with Governor Doyle and Secretary of Transportation Frank Busalacchi.

“Officials in Oconomowoc began asking legitimate questions regarding the costs local taxpayers would incur to construct and maintain a train station and rather than answer those questions, the State scraps the planned station altogether,” said Brett Healy, President of the MacIver Institute. “We want to know why and there is no excuse to deny these simple requests for the truth.”

MacIver filed identical open records requests with Doyle and Busalacchi two weeks ago. Both requests were sent via US Mail. The request of Governor Doyle was also hand-delivered and Busalacchi’s was also faxed to his office.

The requests read, in part:

On behalf of the John K. MacIver Institute for Public Policy this is a formal request for the following records, under the state’s Open Records Law (Wis. Stats. 19.31-39):

Copies and records of all communications from July 1, 2010 to August 19, 2010 which include you or members of your staff regarding the Oconomowoc stop on the Milwaukee to Madison rail line

This request includes, but is not limited too, documents, emails and records of phone calls (from you and members of your staff) regarding the logistics, design, development and approval of a train station in Oconomowoc.

“Local government officials, and the taxpayers they represent, have a right to ask legitimate questions regarding an expensive federal and state project that will also require significant local tax expenditures,” said Healy. “There are a lot of questions surrounding this project and DOT and the Governor’s office should quit stonewalling and provide some answers.”

Letter to Governor Doyle
Letter to Secretary Busalacchi

Rail Controversy Grows to Include Milwaukee Station Construction

MacIver News Service | August 24, 2010

[Milwaukee, Wisc…] The skepticism over the Milwaukee to Madison rail line continues to focus on costs this week as the State Department of Transportation considers spending millions on upgrades to Milwaukee’s Amtrak station, a project that itself has been beset with controversy.

The Wisconsin Department of Transportation plans to start an $18 million remodeling and expansion of the combined bus and train depot, known as the Milwaukee Intermodal Station, in October.  The new train shed will feature escalators, elevators, three boarding platforms and a mezzanine spanning five tracks. The DOT will hold a public informational meeting on the project Tuesday night from 4 p.m. to 7 p.m. in the atrium at the station, 433 W. St. Paul Ave.

“We just can’t afford the boondoggle of a high speed rail system, and at an upcoming special meeting of the Common Council, I will be asking my colleagues to support a resolution asking the Wisconsin Department of Transportation to put a stop to the funding of the “Garage Mahal,” said Milwaukee Alderman Joe Dudzik.

However, fellow alderman Robert Buaman disagrees. He said the construction jobs created by the remodeling as well as the economic benefits of having modern, high-speed rail in Wisconsin “can only create positive momentum and a better quality of life for our residents.”

The existing train shed facility was built more than 30 years ago.
The DOT says it needs to be replaced and a new shed has been planned for several years. However given the controversies surrounding the Intermodal Station itself, and the Milwaukee to Madison rail project in general, the remodeling of the shed has drawn harsh rebukes from its critics.

Dudzik says the rail project is an example of misplaced priorities.

“Milwaukee has lost millions in tax base to recent flooding and sewer backups, and the city’s beat-up roadways and antiquated sewer system are badly in need of repair,” said Dudzik. “However, there’s a plan to renovate the train shed at the Amtrak depot for $16-$18 million?”

The existing Milwaukee Amtrak station itself was remodeled in 2007 and expanded to include a Greyhound bus depot. That project cost more than $15 million dollars. Although public funds were used on the project, the facility is leased to and operated by a private developer who benefited from Tax Incremental Financing and is responsible for paying property taxes on the building.

The developer, Milwaukee Intermodal Partners, reportedly spent nearly $3 million in the renovation.  The City of Milwaukee provided $6 million from a tax incremental financing district, and the remaining $6.8 million came from state and federal funds.  Despite the construction costs, the city assessed the value of the building at $5.7 million. That assessment has since been lowered and for 2010 the city now values the property at $3 million.

Adding to the controversy over the Intermodal Station are problems Milwaukee has had collecting taxes on the building. To avoid foreclosure on the property, Governor Jim Doyle announced earlier this month that the State of Wisconsin would pay the City of Milwaukee the property taxes owed by Milwaukee Intermodal Parters.  The total, which includes back taxes from 200, 2009, penalties and interest totals $341,461.

A Refusal is Not the Act of a Friend…

Lessons from the Corelone Family and the Doyle Administration

“You do not come to Las Vegas and talk to a man like Moe Greene like that!” –Fredo Corleone (1972).

“Whether we have these intermediate stations or not is irrelevant. We can do this without those stations if we have to.” –Wisconsin Secretary of Transportation Frank Busalacchi (2010).

Attention residents of communities between Madison and Milwaukee. The 79-mile per hour rail plan designed to enhance connectivity with the city of Chicago has absolutely nothing to do with you.

Got that?

So now the truth can be told. The Milwaukee to Madison 79-mile per hour rail route that connects Madison to Milwaukee has everything to do with eventually connecting Minneapolis to Chicago rather than enhancing the transportation options for Wisconsin residents.

But Badger state residents need not feel left out. If the Doyle Administration has their way, local property taxpayers will still be footing the bill for annual maintenance, increased road traffic and police protection associated with any stations that are built.

Oh, and then there is the annual multi million-dollar state subsidy that will be required tokeep the rail line operational (Some officials have estimated that subsidy could be as high as $16 million each year).

There are a lot of questions surrounding this 79-mile per hour DoyleLine between Milwaukee and Madison.

When local officials in Southeast Wisconsin recently began asking questions regarding the station-related costs for which their local property tax payers would be on the hook, Wisconsin’s DOT provided threats, not answers.

A refusal to accept the responsibilities and costs associated with the construction and maintenance of a rail station is not the act of a friend, you see.

No word if Oconomowoc Mayor James Daley woke up today with a horse head in his bed, but Busalacchi carried out his threat and sent Oconomowoc’s would-be rail station to sleep with the fishes. That’s all we know. However, the MacIver Institute has filed open records requests for information that should shed some light on the Oconomoc decision, if and when the Governor’s office and the DOT comply.

Busalacchi’s dismissal of local communities’ interests came on Mike Gousha’s statewide public affairs program this past weekend. During the same interview, he boasted that a major contract would be let this October and that state officials would spend upwards of $300 million dollars by the end of the year in their attempt to force the hand of the next governor to continue with the project.

Federal subsidies that necessitate long-term support of state taxpayers…

Strong-arm tactics against political opponents…

Out of control spending…

Secretive deals…

Contempt for the public…

Retribution to those who refuse to submit…

This DoyleLine rail plan is the legacy of Jim Doyle in a nutshell.

 

By Brian Fraley
A MacIver Perspective

 

MacIver Institute Files Open Records Requests Regarding Oconomowoc Train Station

Free Market Think Tank Pursues Communications from Governor’s Office and DOT

[Madison, Wisc..] The John K. MacIver Institute for Public Policy is investigating the events surrounding the abrupt alterations in the Milwaukee to Madison rail project.

On Tuesday, DOT officials notified the City of Oconomowoc that their city was no longer being considered for a stop on the controversial passenger rail line.

“Officials in Oconomowoc began asking legitimate questions regarding the costs local taxpayers would incur to construct and maintain a train station and rather than answer those questions, the State scraps the planned station altogether,” said Brett Healy, President of the MacIver Institute. “We’re now looking for answers as to how this all developed.”

MacIver filed identical open records requests with Governor Doyle and Department of Transportation Secretary Frank Busalacchi.  The requests read, in part:

On behalf of the John K. MacIver Institute for Public Policy this is a formal request for the following records, under the state’s Open Records Law (Wis. Stats. 19.31-39):

Copies and records of all communications from July 1, 2010 to August 19, 2010 which include you or members of your staff regarding the Oconomowoc stop on the Milwaukee to Madison rail line

This request includes, but is not limited too, documents, emails and records of phone calls (from you and members of your staff) regarding the logistics, design, development and approval of a train station in Oconomowoc.

“Local government officials, and the taxpayers they represent, have a right to ask legitimate questions regarding an expensive federal and state project that will also require significant local tax expenditures,” said Healy. “The MacIver Institute hopes these open record requests will help shed some light on the decision making process that led to this dramatic change of course.”

Letter to Governor Doyle Letter to Secretary Busalacchi

Hearing from the People Re: Milwaukee to Madison Rail Project

I had the pleasure of meeting many of my neighbors the other night and enjoyed a lively discussion on the topic of the so-called high-speed rail line between Milwaukee and Madison.

We came with questions. Many also came with something to say.

The meeting Tuesday night before at Brookfield City Hall got off to an inauspicious start when the overflow crowd was informed that “This is not a public hearing,” and that as is customary for all City Council meetings there would be 15 minutes set aside before the Council meeting began for the public to offer comments.

Fortunately, and to his credit, Mayor Steve Ponto waived the formalities and gave all those in the assembled crowd the opportunity to speak for a few minutes, providing they did not repeat comments or assertions made by previous speakers.

Well done, Mr. Mayor.

Because of Ponto’s rational decision, the crowd of more than 100 heard from a dozen or so speakers who expressed their opinion on the train in general, and the question of a proposed station in Brookfield in particular.

One woman hit the nail on the head early on in the evening,

“My main concern is for the city of Brookfield. I am really concerned about this cost and everything this is going to do to the taxpayers of this city,” she said.

While I have larger concerns with the project as a whole, as a Brookfield resident, homeowner and property tax payer, I echo her comments.

After about 40 minutes of public testimony (the crowd was approximately 80 percent opposed to the train) the Council began their meeting with a briefing by a few of the State Department of Transportation representatives who are working on the Milwaukee to Madison rail project.  They provided a summary of the August 3rd public hearing held in Brookfield and also provided answers to questions previously posed by the public and members of the Council.

Here is some of what was said, some of what was learned and some of the questions that remain unanswered in the wake of the meeting.

  • The DOT has been all over the place as far as what the required size of the Brookfield station would be. Whether the proposed station would cost 17.9 million or as much as $30 million would depend on the parking requirements (which have ranged from around 250 to as high as 550).
  • The state will only commit to paying $5 million toward construction of the station. This includes roadway and safety upgrades as well as land acquisition costs.
  • Brookfield would be stuck with annual maintenance costs for the station, which could range from a low of $30,000 annually to a high in excess of $100,000 a year.
  • Due to the fact the train will share tracks with freight trains, the train will not be high speed for some time.
  • The DOT claims traffic disruption on most cross streets would be no more significant that a typical stoplight, although it would take ‘a little longer’ at the intersections closer to the station.
  • DOT anticipates but would not guarantee the labor to construct the line would be from Wisconsin-based companies.
  • City officials do not anticipate the need to widen Brookfield Road to accommodate any increase in traffic.
  • DOT officials estimate 124,000 passengers per year will either get on or get off the train in Brookfield.
  • No figures were available for the increased cost of road maintenance or police protection that would be necessitated by the foot and car traffic due to the development of the Brookfield station.
  • The fare costs are unknown. (However, in its application for federal funds the state estimated the cost of a ticket from Milwaukee to Madison to be between $22 and $33 each way.)
  • The amount of annual state subsidies to operate the train is unknown.
  • The per-passenger mile cost of the route is unknown.
  • Any federal monies spent on the plan would have to be returned if the line and station is not operational for 20 years.

I’ve now attended a few meetings regarding the Madison to Milwaukee rail project and a pattern has developed.

What is known is the amount of federal taxes will be used (up to $810 million).

What is known is how much the state taxpayers will pay to construct the station in Brookfield ($5 million).

But there are so many unknowns. Including, it has to be noted, whether the new Governor will go through with the project. Barrett says he will, Walker has been adamant that he will not (to the point of even running television ads about that pledge) Neumann has agreed with Walker.

Given the uncertainties, why would local officials green light the use of even one dime of precious tax dollars on this boondoggle, at this time?

The full Council may take up measures relating to the construction of a rail station in September.  If Tuesday night’s feedback was any indication—and I’d bet my shirt it is, if they decide to follow the will of the people of Brookfield, a station will not be built in my hometown.

But why take my word for it? I’ve only been a resident of Brookfield for two years. That, and my attendance at last night’s meeting may leave me with an incomplete or inaccurate picture of the will of the people.

So let’s do this right.

How about a referendum this November?

SHALL THE CITY OF BROOKFIELD EXPEND PUBLIC RESOURCES TO DESIGN, DEVELOP, CONSTRUCT AND/OR MAINTAIN A TRAIN STATION TO SERVE AS A STOP ON THE MILWAUKEE TO MADISON RAIL LINE?

Let’s give the people the chance to express their opinion.

While Mayor Ponto’s accommodation at Tuesday’s meeting was generous, the referendum would be the ultimate public hearing.

What say you, residents of Brookfield (and for that matter Oconomowoc, Watertown, Milwaukee and Madison)?

Why not hold referenda in each city this November to see if local residents want to pay for local costs associated with the Milwaukee-Madison rail project?

By Brian Fraley
A MacIver Perspective

Does the train stop here?

The fastest thing about the Milwaukee to Madison high speed train may be the outgoing administration’s rush get as much of this venture in motion as possible before handing over the project to a new governor.

We’ve witnessed periodic announcements that ‘new’ funds are being ‘released’to finance the construction of the line itself and the various train stations along the route.

The state DOT continues to hold public informational meetings about the project.

The Secretary of the US Department of Transportation has gone so far as to say during a recent visit to Wisconsin. “High-speed rail is coming to Wisconsin—there’s no stopping it.” 

But is he correct?

“The feds gave the money to the state. It is up to the state to complete the project. If no contracts have been signed, the state can give the money back” says Randal O’Toole, Senior Fellow with the Cato Institute who has been following high speed rail developments in Wisconsin.

In the past several months, Doyle’s DOT has been busy signing contracts, although they’ve not been very transparent about it.

The Business Journal of Milwaukee reported this spring:

The state’s rail bureau is scurrying to get contracts for the high-speed rail corridor between Milwaukee and Madison out the door so work on the controversial line is well under way in case Milwaukee County Executive Scott Walker is elected governor this fall.

That same article noted that “DOT officials would not talk to The Business Journal about the high-speed rail contract procedure.”

O’Toole said the contracts could make it difficult for a political figure to dismantle to project.

“If some contracts have been signed, then it will be tough for the state to give the rest of the money back and leave the project half completed,” said O’Toole.

Yet, in a recent debate both Republican candidates for governor have indicated that is precisely what they will do.

The Business Journal’s piece earlier this spring was in reaction to earlier statements by Milwaukee County Executive Scott Walker.

I attempted to get further comment from all three major candidates for governor. Although the campaigns of Congressman Mark Neumann and Milwaukee Mayor Tom Barrett did not respond to the inquiries, their position on this project is clear. Like Walker, Neumann opposes it, while Barrett strongly supports the Milwaukee to Madison high speed rail line.

Walker reaffirmed his position to the MacIver Institute this week, in his strongest public comments on the matter to date.

“I am drawing a line in the sand – no matter how much money Governor Doyle, Mayor Barrett, and the Obama Administration try to spend before the end of the year, I will put a stop to this $810 million boondoggle the day I take office,” Walker told me. “This is not “free money,” and I refuse to commit our state to years of irresponsible spending down the road.  To truly help Wisconsin build the transportation infrastructure it needs and desires, we should use this money for roads and bridges instead.”

Not a lot of wiggle room there.

As O’Toole notes, while the state and federal DOTs rush to develop the Milwaukee to Madison rail project, the size, scope and cost of the plan has increased.

Most notably, the decision to move the Madison station from the Airport to just off the Capitol Square will increase the cost of the project, although Doyle Administration officials have not said by how much.

“The state grant application promised 79-mph trains by 2013 and 110-mph trains by 2016,” said O’Toole. “But moving the terminus the Monona Terrace instead of the airport will increase costs.”

O’Toole wonders, “Will there be enough money left over to make the upgrades needed for 110 mph trains? I strongly suspect not.”

O’Toole outlines a likely scenario with the continuing evolution of the Milwaukee to Madison rail project.

“Instead, the state will build a 79-mph train, attract a few riders, declare it to be a great success, then demand more money out of federal or state taxpayers to upgrade it to 110 mph. I also suspect that such upgrades will not be completed until long after 2016. So Wisconsin is going to end up with a white-elephant train that has poor ridership, high operating costs, and just enough special interest backing to keep it (and the losses) going for years.”

That is, unless the project is stopped.

Perhaps it is because of the forcefulness of Walker’s pronouncements, but that’s clearly something rail proponents are worried about. How else would you explain the recent meeting in Milwaukee wherein representatives of the Midwest High Speed Rail Association encouraged attendees to lobby lawmakers to favor the project?  Or the ongoing public relations efforts by the State DOT, much less their behind-the-scenes sprint to get contracts for the project executed.

If it all were a done deal there would be no mad scramble. There would be no push to get the public to contact lawmakers. There would be no PR campaign.

Despite Ray LaHood’s statement to the contrary, this one is far from over folks, stay tuned.

By Brian Fraley
A MacIver Perspective

Rail-Caused Traffic Congestion is Madison’s Inconvenient Truth

While President Obama’s Transportation Secretary Ray LaHood was telling Wisconsinites that the federal government was going to make them pay for a new proposed high-speed train line whether they want it or not, Wisconsin residents were finding a new reason to object. Not only is the operation of the train too expensive, the trains may be counter-productive to reducing traffic congestion. 

Congressional candidate Peter Theron recently reminded voters that trains do not just magically appear at a train station. Trains have to ride railroad tracks to get there, often causing the traffic congestion the trains are supposed to alleviate.  
 
Theron, a Republican running in Wisconsin’s Second Congressional District, proposed simulating the combined effect of Madison’s proposed commuter rail line and the rail line from Madison to Milwaukee. Theron asked the City of Madison for permission to shut down the intersections where John Nolen Drive, South Blair Street, East Wilson Street and Williamson Street meet the rail line twenty-six times in a two-hour period during the afternoon rush hour.
 
Theron said he used the city’s information to figure out how many times traffic would need to be stopped.
 
“What I looked at was the application that the city made,” Theron said. “The city assumed a ten minute wait time at peak times for the train.” 
 
Theron said that would mean six eastbound trains plus six westbound trains every hour through the intersection, plus the additional rail traffic of the Milwaukee to Madison train.
 
When asked what kind of reaction Theron was getting for his experiment, he said it has been mostly positive. One person even said to him, “Wow, why doesn’t the city do it?”
 
Perhaps the city should. A 2008 application for preliminary engineering for the Transport 2020 plan that was sent to the Federal Transit Administration indicates that if plan is not followed (including a commuter rail line), travelers at the intersection in question can expect an additional one to six minute delay by the year 2030. The application does not indicate the amount of delay that would be caused by the proposed commuter rail train and the proposed high-speed rail line.
 
Theron applied using the process to close streets for block parties, rallies, parades and other events.  “We do it all the time,” he said. Theron chose the intersection because of the amount of traffic and because it “has a fairly sophisticated set of lights,” adding that the lights have left turn signals.
 
The Street Use Commission rejected the application, largely for reasons of safety. Theron said Commission members were mainly concerned with the safety of stopping and starting traffic in the intersection. Chairwoman Kelli Lamberty also expressed a concern over the appropriateness of the use of the permit for a traffic experiment.
 
Theron said he will continue to raise awareness on the issue. He is planning on an informational picket at the intersection on the day he planned to stop traffic, August 27th.
 
It was a rough week for supporters of the proposed high-speed rail line. Residents in Brookfield and Oconomowoc, locations of stations along the proposed route, expressed their opposition to the rail line at meetings sponsored by the Wisconsin Department of Transportation. 
 
Brookfield’s proposed train station is well away from the main business district on highway 18 and the Brookfield Square shopping mall. The Brookfield station is expected to cost $17.9 million, of which $5 million will come from the federal government.
 
In Oconomowoc, residents there will be asked to build a parking lot for the new station, a cost that has yet to be determined. Oconomowoc residents will also be expected to pay for the ongoing maintenance costs of the station.  
 
As Brookfield and Oconomowoc residents learned, there will be costs for stations that will be where they’re not wanted. Theron reminded us that there are other costs for being caught on the wrong side of the tracks, even in Madison. 

By James Wigderson
Special Guest Perspective for the MacIver Institute

Taxpayers Get Chance to Sound Off on Transportation Fund Raids

MacIver News Service | July 30, 2010

[Madison, Wisc...] Voters in nearly half of Wisconsin’s counties will have an opportunity to sound off on the exceedingly controversial practice of raiding the state’s transportation fund to pay for general state services.

As of this week, 35 counties are planning identically-worded advisory referenda on the topic. The question on the ballot will read:

“Should the Wisconsin Constitution be amended to prohibit any further transfers or lapses from the segregated transportation fund?”

“We are hearing from people all over the state and they are fed up with these budget gimmicks and are grateful that many of the counties are giving them a voice,” Craig Thompson, Executive Director of the Transportation Development Association of Wisconsin, told the MacIver Institute.

Ninety two  percent of state funding in the transportation fund came from the gas tax and vehicle registration fees in the 2007-09 biennium., according to the Department of Transportation.

Since 2003, nearly $1.3 billion of the funds, supposedly reserved for maintaining and improving Wisconsin’s transportation infrastructure, have been diverted by Governor Doyle and legislature for other uses.

Craig Thompson

Supporters of this referenda initiative want to put an end to such raids. As an advisory referendum, legislative action would still be required in two consecutive legislative sessions before a binding statewide referendum would be held to amend the State Constitution. Organizers believe this is an important first step, however.

“Hopefully, this will translate into decisive action when the next legislature convenes in Madison,” said Thompson.

According to a 2009 report from the nonpartisan Legislative Fiscal Bureau the raids from the last three Budgets have been used to finance a variety of purposes other than those for which the funds were reserved.

“The 2003-05 budget act used a combination of direct appropriations from the transportation fund for general fund programs (shared revenue and K-12 education aids) and a transfer of revenues from the transportation fund to the general fund, for a total of $675.0 million.”

The report continues: “The 2005-07 biennial budget act made a transfer of $427.0 million from the transportation fund to the general fund, but did not make any direct appropriations from the transportation fund to general fund programs.”

Finally, “The 2007-09 budget act (Act 20) and the 2008-09 budget adjustment act (Act 226) together resulted in a transfer of $155 million from the transportation fund to the general fund.“

The six-year total of transfers and appropriations from the transportation fund was $1.257 billion. Adding to it, the current budget includes raids of at least $66 million.

The funds taken out of the transportation fund are offset by increased state borrowing.

The 2009-11 state budget authorizes transportation bonding of $1.304 billion, which is an increase of $767 million in borrowing over the 2007-09 budget, which already was in addition to a 96 percent increase in transportation fund supported bonds between 2002 and 2006, according to another analysis conducted by the LFB.

“County highway departments have seen firsthand the negative impact past transfers have had on the public’s confidence in transportation investment in Wisconsin,” said Daniel J. Fedderly, executive director of the Wisconsin County Highway Association.

Thompson and Feddrely’s groups are a part of Finding Forward, a broad-based coalition of Wisconsin county and municipal governments, private businesses, organized labor, agriculture, non-profit associations, and other groups, all of which support amending the Wisconsin constitution to prohibit transferring money from the transportation fund to the state’s general fund or for purposes unrelated to transportation.

“The progress of this initiative is very, very encouraging,” Fedderly said. “By voting to place the advisory referendum question on their fall ballots, these counties have said yes to letting citizens make their voices heard on whether the transportation fund should be used only for transportation-related purposes.”

Finding Forward notes a majority of states in the nation currently protect their transportation funds via constitutional provisions.

As of this week, the advisory referendum will appear on the fall election ballot in the following counties:

Adams
Barron
Brown
Burnett
Calumet
Chippewa
Columbia
Dodge
Door
Douglas
Eau   -Claire
Grant
Green
Jackson
Juneau
Lafayette
Lincoln
Manitowoc
Marathon
Marquette
Menominee
Monroe
Outagamie
Pepin
Pierce
Polk
Portage
Racine
St. Croix
Vernon
Vilas
Waukesha
Waupaca
Waushara
Winnebago

More information about Finding Forward and the campaign to safeguard Wisconsin’s transportation fund is available at

www.FindingForwardWisconsin.org.

Bauman’s Whiney Strategy Memo Not Funny, But Revealing

Milwaukee Alderman Bob Bauman has offered an instructive “strategy memo” for political candidates for governor concerning high-speed rail. Bauman’s memo is directed at the two Republican candidates, which should be news in itself. One should expect a press release from the Neumann and Walker campaigns for governor, “Milwaukee Democrat predicts Republican win in November.”

Bauman’s memo offers advice to the two candidates to cynically campaign against high-speed rail but then become a high-speed rail supporter once in office. It’s meant in sarcasm but even the sarcasm is revealing.

The first piece of advice by Bauman is to continue campaigning against high speed rail. Apparently Bauman believes the Republican candidates are as cynical as he is.  Bauman says they should avoid any mention of people who are unable to get around by car because of “disability, age or economic circumstances.”

Perhaps Bauman should avoid mentioning them, too. The high-speed rail line isn’t targeted for those people. As Bauman explained in a previous press release, “intercity rail passengers tend to be middle- and upper-middle class persons who vote, including campaign contributing business persons.” The expected $33 to $40 one-way fare will put it beyond those who are hampered from travel because of economic circumstances. For those that can’t contribute to Bauman’s campaign fund, there is always Greyhound.

“Never mention that gasoline prices may increase significantly in the near future.

“Avoid any mention of the fact that the $823 million federal investment in high-speed rail cannot be redirected to freeway expansion or highway projects.”

If gas prices increase dramatically in the future, so will the price of operating the train. What does he think it runs on, solar power? Does he think there will be giant windmills on the trains?

As for the $823 million in federal money, there is no such thing as free money. The cost of operating the high-speed rail train ($15.6 million the first year including the leg to Chicago) will be borne by Wisconsin taxpayers. While the federal money cannot be redirected, the high-speed rail project will be re-directing funds from the state’s transportation fund to pay for the train, if the money does not come from the taxpayers directly.

The Milwaukee alderman then has a suggestion the Republican governor include in his inauguration address.

Lead off inaugural speech with solemn pledge to stop Milwaukee-Madison high speed rail construction. Repeat evils of rail and emphasize that you will save civilization from the scourge of rail travel and the big government it represents. Repeat pledges to cut taxes and slash public services including corrections, aid to public schools, the University of Wisconsin system and shared revenue to all those cities incapable of living within their means. Make sure everyone understands that none of this cutting will include freeway expansion or highway building since cheap gas and free roads are a fundamental right of every true American.

It’s good that Bauman understands high-speed rail is representative of the problems of big government. As for cutting corrections, perhaps the alderman was referring to the last budget that included an early release program to cut costs, releasing criminals onto the streets of Milwaukee. Meanwhile, because the state legislature and the governor were unable to prioritize, the state transportation fund was raided to fill the gap in education spending.
One month in for the next administration, Bauman suggests that it would be okay then for the new governor to forget the promise to abandon the high-speed rail project.

With a very serious and somber tone report that over the last month you have asked the best legal minds in the state to find a way to stop Milwaukee-to-Madison high speed rail construction and cancel all contracts let to date — but that the legal experts have informed you that it cannot be done unless the state agrees to reimburse the federal government for all funds expended to date and to reimburse the contractors for all the lost profits and cancellation penalties contained in their contracts. You report with great reluctance that construction must therefore proceed because the state cannot afford to stop construction. Be sure to emphasize over and over that this is the legacy of Jim Doyle who has saddled the citizens of Wisconsin with a multi-million dollar federal investment in new infrastructure.

Perhaps that is the way government works in the City of Milwaukee. However, Bauman might remember when Milwaukee County Executive Scott Walker was confronted with the “Blue Shirt” art project at the airport. Everyone told him it couldn’t be cancelled. The “Blue Shirt” was never built.

Unlike the “Blue Shirt” a high-speed rail line would have continued operation and maintenance costs, costs that the taxpayers will understand as an unnecessary drain on the state budget. Yes, it will be the legacy of Governor Jim Doyle if this project proceeds when it is highly likely his successor will be forced to cancel the project to prevent it from becoming another long-term obligation on the state budget that can’t afford to add any more obligations. It is also entirely possible that, given the state of the federal budget, the next Congress will be forced to reduce its commitment to these kinds of boondoggle projects.

Do not mention the phone calls from the CEOs of the Wisconsin consulting firms and contractors who were awarded rail contracts and do not mention the fact that they urged you to keep construction moving forward because this project will employ thousands of their employees. Deflect any media questions about campaign contributions from employees of these consultants and contractors. After all, you know that these contributors are only interested in good government.

Again, perhaps in the cynical world of Milwaukee aldermanic politics an alderman could sell out so cheaply. Is that what the alderman is doing, deflecting questions about contributors to him?

After the news conference, call your former campaign operatives, Charlie and Mark, to conduct phone interviews on their radio shows. Again, emphasize how angry you are in being unable to undo the high speed rail project. Be sure to lay all the blame on Jim Doyle and President Obama. Don’t worry, Mark and Charlie won’t be too hard on you, for you know you are “their guy” and you can do no wrong.

Assuming Bauman is referring to Milwaukee radio talk show hosts Charlie Sykes and Mark Belling, would that be before or after they lead their listeners in a recall petition drive? If they do not, surely the Tea Party will. We are in a new political atmosphere where politicians are being held accountable for what they say and do. Perhaps the alderman is bit insulated by the contributors, the consultants and the contractors.

Still, predicting a ribbon cutting on the trains two years from now, Bauman offers his advice what a Republican should say when the Obama economy puts “gasoline prices at $6 per gallon and the Wisconsin unemployment rate at 12%.”

Make a surprise announcement, to wit: that you have just signed a full funding agreement with the federal government to begin construction of the high speed rail line from Madison to the Twin Cities. Emphasize the thousands of construction jobs that will be created and the economic development that will occur in Wisconsin communities along the line. Mention that this new line will make the Chicago-Milwaukee-Madison-Twin Cities corridor the economic engine of the Midwest and the five hour travel time between Chicago and the Twin Cities will revolutionize travel within the state.

Of course this was never about one set of trains. We’ll have another round of shared construction costs ($2 local tax money for every $10 federal) and even more operational expenses. When those trains aren’t enough, there will be more construction to build a train to Green Bay. Then more tracks will be laid to cross the northern part of the state. Because what the train advocates forget to tell everyone is that the trains only go where the tracks are laid. To get to where you want to go you have to build more tracks. Where the state will end up is the poorhouse but that will be okay for Bauman’s contributors, contractors and consultants who will be providing transportation welfare aimed at people who don’t need it.

As for an unemployment rate of 12%, that is going to mean there will be a lot less taxpayers paying for the trains. Good thing running the trains will create 55 permanent jobs. At $6 per gallon for fuel, those trains are going to be expensive to run, too. Baumann doesn’t say who will be paying the tab.

You might want to reference the blizzard that the train has encountered in Waukesha County just as lunch is being served (add humorous comments about Wisconsin winters). Point out how rail travel is a great all-weather mode of transportation (do not mention the cars in the ditch along Highway 16 that you see from the train window).

Upon arrival in Milwaukee (on time despite blizzard) repeat program.

What Bauman should have said is don’t pity the cars stuck in the snow because the train might be stuck in the snow, too. Unlike the SUVs that Bauman does not want you to drive, you may be stuck a long time on that immobile train, like the riders on Amtrak’s California Zephyr to Chicago. The alternative, a high-speed derailment, might ruin a politician’s whole day.

Don’t worry though; no one remembers campaign promises or inaugural speeches anyway.

Especially when they’re given with Bauman’s acute wisdom and level of cynicism.

By James Wigderson
Special Guest Perspective for the MacIver Institute

Uncivilized Unrest in Milwaukee’s Third Ward

Last week, I did lunch with the sophisticated and civilized people.

I knew the Midwest High Speed Rail Association’s ‘brown bag lunch’ at the Milwaukee Public Market last Thursday was going to be interesting when the first announcement was about how to get your automobile parking vouchers validated.

It was the first incongruous clash between the theory behind rail and the realities of life in the Midwestern United States, but it wouldn’t be the last.

For a little over an hour the crowd of thirty saw a presentation filled with hyperbole and poetry and devoid of any factual discussion over the complexities of establishing a significant rail network in the United States. Noticeably absent from the entire discussion: any mention of the prohibitive costs and subsidies required. Save, that is, for a few claims that the return on the investment makes the expansion of rail beyond debate.

No spreadsheets or projections to back up this assertion. No data comparing the subsidies per passenger-mile of rail to that of other forms of transportation. No acknowledgment that the State of Wisconsin is facing a $2.7 billion deficit.

Instead, the crowd was treated to a PowerPoint pitch depicting rail transit as the solution to our oil crisis and lauding the success of train travel in Europe and China. Finally, we were encouraged at the end to contact members of “your General Assembly” (I assume the speaker meant the state legislature) and the candidates for governor to express their support for the Milwaukee to Madison High Speed Rail Line.

“It is a much more civilized way to travel,” we learned after viewing some pictures of beautiful people on a French train.

Oh, if only we were as civilized as those progressive French. They zoom to the Mediterranean for their long weekends on Bullet trains. (Seriously, this was an example used when addressing the crowd on Water Street in Milwaukee).

Then again, with its multiple stops and the speed topping out at 79 miles per hour, the Milwaukee to Madison line is not high speed. More like half-fast, critics argue.

Oh, if only we could move as quickly as those expeditious Chinese. “China in cleaning our clock with rail,” we were warned. In only two years they’ve finished several lines and are in the process of building several more.

Darn those pesky human rights, property rights, independent local governments and that low-brow representative Democracy that actually has as its goal the exertion of the will of all the people, not just those of us who know best.

A few actually interesting news items were presented at the meeting, although I haven’t seen any coverage of these points.

1)      Richard Harnish, the Executive Director of the Midwest High Speed Rail Association asserted that the state owns all the land necessary to construct the Milwaukee-Madison line, including the land needed to extend the line to a new train station on Madison’s Isthmus, just walking distance from the Capitol.

2)      Because of its deterioration, all of the existing track between Watertown and Madison will need to be removed, regraded and replaced in order for the trains to operate on that stretch.

3)      Advocates are gearing up for the next fight, bringing an Amtrak line (requiring state construction and operational subsidies) north from Milwaukee to Green Bay.

Lobbying

It is ironic that one of the main stated purposes of the meeting was to rev up the troops to lobby the candidates for governor. Milwaukee Alderman Bob Bauman sponsored the meeting and he’s fresh off his sophomoric belittling of the two Republican candidates who have expressed varying levels of opposition to the plan. That’s an interesting way to win over skeptics, Alderman.

Moreover, when asked about Milwaukee County Executive Scott Walker’s pledge to scrap the rail line if elected, Harnish stated he didn’t know if halting the project was even possible.

Really? If it wasn’t a concern, why the meeting in the first place? If this line is a done deal, why the lobbying effort?

Perhaps because they know darn well there is a strong and growing effort to stop the train.

About that Madison Station

The Madison-Milwaukee rail project’s use of more than $800 million in federal stimulus dollars was approved on a 12-4 party line vote by the legislature’s Joint Finance Committee in February.

In addition, the Madison-to-Milwaukee line would initially require an estimated annual state subsidy of $7.5 million, beginning in 2013.

Did I mention the state has a $2.7 billion deficit?

The February stimulus fund approval included $9 million for a station in Madison, although questions were raised as to whether it would be located adjacent to the airport, or in Downtown Madison.

After little public debate over where to locate the station, Governor Doyle made the unilateral decision that it would be located within the Department of Administration building on Wilson Street.

Harnish asserts the land needed for the Madison to Milwaukee route has been bought and there are no eminent domain issues at play in Madison or anywhere else along the proposed route.

Really? We’ll see how that plays out.

Return on Investment, a look at real numbers

As Randal O’Toole of the Cato Institute noted earlier this year:

“The bottom line is anything you can do with trains in Wisconsin, you can do faster, safer, cheaper, safer with busses,” O’Toole told the MacIver Institute this spring.

Moreover, unlike the Midwest High Speed Rail Association’s Harnish who said that the ‘few Shekles’ it would cost the state were worth it, O’Toole backed up his claims with actual data, as you can see here.

O’Toole also debunked the myth that Rail makes sense because of environmental reasons. Again, unlike the folks at the MHSRA, O’Toole provided facts, not merely emotional appeals, to back up his assertions.

If the economic and environmental case could be made, I would be open to supporting investment a real bullet train between Chicago and Minneapolis, providing that went through Milwaukee but didn’t stop every 15 miles. However, proponents of rail are looking far beyond that niche and are pushing for a ‘half-fast’ solution that brings us all the operational inefficiencies of commuter rail, with the construction time and costs of a true high speed line.

No slide show displaying happy Europeans or Chinese rail construction timetables can refute the fact that the Milwaukee to Madison rail line is a project few Wisconsin taxpayers support and none can afford.

For the most part the audience at the Public Market was simply naïve. They see rail as a beautiful, environmental and prudent alternative form of transportation. However, they only see what they want to see. They weren’t aware of or concerned with the costs associated with the Milwaukee to Madison rail line. Surely, the organizers of the event weren’t about to touch that subject.

Which makes them purposefully deceptive. You can’t have a discussion about such a vast public works project without a serious deliberation over the costs. If Alderman Bauman and State Representative Peter Barca (who showed up 50 minutes late, but just in time for his five minutes of mic time) truly believe this rail project is a smart investment, they shouldn’t fear a real presentation. Rather than pictures of jovial Parisians, show us actual data. Rather than generalizations such as, ‘It is clearly worth it,” show us some real calculations.

To add insult to injury, before that meeting began, I had already parked at a pre-pay meter, so I couldn’t even take advantage of the free parking validation.

See, there I go thinking ahead of time about paying for something.

I know. How uncivilized of me.

By Brian Fraley
A MacIver Institute Perspective


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