海角大神

海角大神 / Text

Why Jerry Brown is standing firm on shaky California high-speed rail plan

Another report critical of California's $100-billion high-speed rail project 鈥 the second this month 鈥 has not shaken Gov. Jerry Brown's faith in the plan. He has his eyes on his legacy, some say.

By Daniel B. Wood , Staff writer
Los Angeles

A new report by the state auditor concludes that聽California鈥檚 proposed $98.5 billion bullet train is 鈥渋ncreasingly risky鈥 and has inadequate oversight, adding to a growing pile of formal assessments that raise major concerns about the project.

Three weeks ago, an independent panel required by law to review the plans said the bullet train poses 鈥渁n immense financial risk.鈥 And in November, California's聽independent Legislative Analyst鈥檚 Office said parts of the plan don鈥檛 comply with the 2008 ballot measure that authorized state funding for the project.聽

Undeterred, Gov. Jerry Brown is pressing ahead, claiming that the train will create jobs, accommodate future population growth, and aid the environment.

In his state-of-the-state address Jan. 15, he said boldly:聽鈥淒uring the 1930s, the Central Valley Water Project was called a 'fantastic dream' that 'will not work.' The Master Plan for the Interstate Highway System in 1939 was derided as 'New Deal jitterbug economics.' In 1966, then-Mayor Johnson of聽Berkeley聽called [the Bay Area Rapid Transit system] a 'billion dollar potential fiasco.' Similarly, the Panama Canal was for years thought to be impractical and [British Prime Minister] Benjamin Disraeli himself said of the聽Suez Canal: 'totally impossible to be carried out.' "

"The critics were wrong then and they鈥檙e wrong now,鈥 he concluded.

Political analysts say Governor Brown has his eye on history, trying to be mentioned favorably alongside his father, Pat Brown, who was governor from 1959 to 1967 and whose achievements virtually define modern聽California.

鈥淕overnor Brown is seeking to define his legacy, and public mass transportation is one of the things in which he deeply believes,鈥 says Michael Shires, a public policy specialist at聽Pepperdine聽University. 鈥淭he creation of a high-speed rail link would allow him to leave an imprint on the state that is in the same universe as his father's legacy of water projects, universities, and highways.鈥 聽

The state auditor's report, however, spoke harshly of the plan. It notes that only $12.5 billion of the $100 billion-plus project is secured, with no indication of how the rest is to be obtained. It also claimed that the California High-Speed Rail Authority doesn't have mechanisms in place for monitoring its contractors.

Supporters of the project say the 220-m.p.h. trains will transform transportation in the state and create jobs. The move is also shrewd politically for Brown, helping him with unions, who helped elect him and whose support he needs for a tax-hike initiative this fall, analysts say. Plus, touting rail has very little downside for now.

鈥淧articularly during a difficult recession, reminding voters of long term makes him look like a visionary,鈥 says Dan Schnur,聽director of the Jesse M. Unruh Institute of Politics at the聽University聽of聽Southern California.

It was the Obama administration, he and others note, that last year pushed the idea of a national, high-speed rail network.

鈥淭he last thing the White House wants is to be undermined by a Democratic governor of California, so it doesn鈥檛 cost Brown anything to talk up high-speed rail,鈥 says Mr. Schnur.

But Republicans are calling for a stop to the project, and opponents have been cleared to begin a signature-gathering drive aimed at putting an anti-rail initiative on the ballot.

鈥淭his is a train to nowhere, the Governor Moonbeam express,鈥 says Assemblywoman Diane Harkey, invoking the pejorative nickname given to Brown in his first term聽by聽Chicago聽journalist Mike Royko, who thought Brown鈥檚 wild ideas were appealing only to a New Age crowd.聽聽

She says part of the reason Brown doesn鈥檛 want to back off now is because $3.5 billion that has already been designated by the Obama administration includes funding for a project in Rep. Nancy Pelosi鈥檚 district.

She also questions the ridership and cost figures.

鈥淭hey are playing lots of shenanigans, like counting one man who is a potential ticket taker for 20 years as 20 jobs,鈥 says Ms. Harkey.

Some national observers are worried what the聽California聽episode might mean for high-speed rail elsewhere.聽

鈥淭here were enough objective critics of this program back when it was first proposed that predicted we would find ourselves in this spot today,鈥 says聽Peter Zaleski, an economics professor at the Villanova School of Business in Philadelphia, who follows transportation issues.聽鈥淥pponents will use the current report as evidence to support the case that we never should have moved forward on this project. I fear that proponents will view this as just another hurdle and rationalize the need to push forward.鈥

The questions may all be moot if funding can鈥檛 be found.

鈥淔iscal problems are putting many spending ideas on hold in Washington and state capitals, and California high-speed rail may well join other programs on the shelf due to lack of financing,鈥 says Steven Schier, political scientist at Carleton College in Northfield, Minn. 鈥淭he plain fact is that high-speed rail is so expensive that it is necessary for a state to be in sound fiscal shape in order to fund it.聽California聽unfortunately is not in such shape now and won鈥檛 be anytime soon.鈥

鈥淐alifornians have a tradition of committing funds first and thinking about who will pay later,鈥 says Ken Button, a transportation specialist at聽George聽Mason聽University in Fairfax, Va.

It may come down to a combination of what the聽California聽economy does in the next few months and Jerry Brown鈥檚 skills as a politician.

鈥淚f he pulls it off, he鈥檒l go down as a visionary,鈥 writes columnist Dan Walters in the Sacramento Bee. 鈥淚f it fails, he'll go down as a narcissistic daydreamer."