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We're broke (unable to meet current needs out of current revenues), so let's borrow money NOW so spend on more current needs (reducing unemployment) and then we'll have the future taxpayer's pay off the principle and interest out of future sources of revenue (who cares which ones, that's THEIR problem). You will note that an implicit part of this whole process is permanent increasing borrowing to service debt and interest. See Greece for a similar process. |
you cant simply cut your way out of debt and revenue issues. you need to spend to spur growth. its common sense. When business is slow, you spend more on advertisement and marketing, along with cuts, to spur new business.
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It is also unlike Greece because you would put people back to work with good jobs building new subways and freeways. These people will then pay taxes, they will spend money in their communities supporting businesses that will also pay taxes. The multiplier effect is another simple economic concept. Finally, unlike Greece, the money for the 30/10 Plan would not go for pensions, etc... It would go to build physical, tangible, infrastructure assets that LA will have for the next 50-75 years. This will help Southern California residents be more productive by giving them an alternative to highway congestion and it will likely provide them with more discretionary income by giving them an alternative modes of transportation that require spending thousands of dollars per year on oil. Again, this will be money that can be spent locally instead of being sent abroad to import oil. |
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Freeway 'cap' could reunite downtown with the ocean
July 7, 2012 By Arlene Martinez Read More: http://www.vcstar.com/news/2012/jul/...town-with-the/ Quote:
http://media.vcstar.com/media/img/ph...35587_t607.JPG |
So there are THREE capping proposals for the 101 in the LA area? Wow.
The Parkway Presidio under construction in SF is putting the 101 in two sets of tunnels. Previously, the freeway ran on a elevated structure. Just think its cool the 101 is "going underground" in so many places! Really hope the Ventura plan comes to fruition and serve as a model for small to mid-sized cities (cough, Santa Rosa, cough) |
^ For a grand total of six in the LA Metro: :)
Park 101 cap Hollywood freeway park Santa Monica 10 freeway park Ventura 101 freeway cap USC 110 freeway park Glendale 134 freeway park (kinda of new: http://www.melendrez.com/news/Entrie...k_Project.html) |
wow i had never heard of the Glendale proposal. its a natural fit. do you have any other links for this?
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Metro till 2 AM on Fridays and Saturdays. FINALLY!!!
In the nearly three years that I’ve been running this blog, I’m pretty sure the most requested service change from readers has been for more late night rail service, particularly on the weekends. Metro CEO Art Leahy has decided to do just that. The specifics: •All Metro Rail lines will run until 2 a.m. on Friday and Saturday nights. That includes the Red/Purple Line subway, the Blue Line, Expo Line, Green Line and Gold Line. •Trains will run every 20 minutes between midnight and 2 a.m. •The Orange Line will run until 2:40 a.m. on Friday and Saturday nights in order to meet the last trains at the North Hollywood Red Line station. The Orange Line will also run every 20 minutes between midnight and 2:40 a.m. •The plan at this moment is to begin late-night service on the weekend of July 27-28 but Metro is also working to determine if late night service is needed on the Silver Line, as well as working with Metrolink on the possibility of extending their service to connect with Metro’s. Metro will provide more details on scheduling later in the month and there will be a considerable p.r. push to let everyone know about the new service. Suffice it to say, this is good news for workers and those going out on weekend nights, whether it’s to restaurants, bars or the many events in the region. |
That's really good news as just last week my wife and I (although we both have cars) was rushing to get one the last running trains back to our car at a expo line station. Our thing was we wanted to stay later but knew we had to make sure we didn't get stranded, or try to figure out a way to take a slow late night bus.
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With that said, no park plan in Southern California even comes close to the LA River restoration :( |
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I can vouch first hand for SV, because this is what I do; marketing costs have been enormously slashed and small PR and marketing firms gone out of business. You really have to get away from these "simplified Keynesian" ideas. Other than left-leaning politicians, these haven't been believed or in vogue for about 40 years now. |
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You would propose to cap the 101 through Santa Rosa? It seems like there is neither the density nor the lack of park or open space there that this sort of thing would require. I would stick with the current widening project and then look for other ways to spend money. |
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The 101 tears right through the middle of the city, dividing the entire town. Nowhere is this more apparent than with downtown and Railroad Square. To this day, this is a huge problem as it gives the feeling the city has two struggling centers, rather than a unified core (one for the tourists, the other for business). That is what freeway capping is about, reconnecting divided neighborhoods. With the main SMART SR station in Railroad Sq, passengers heading to downtown will have to cross under the monstrosity. Sure, with all of society's unmet needs there are plenty of other ways to spend the money. And for the record, the freeway widening in Santa Rosa is complete. So the freeway will likely remain as it is for at least the next decade. One can still dream. |
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Subway Line Meets an Obstruction: Beverly Hills High School (NY Times)
Subway Line Meets an Obstruction: Beverly Hills High School
By ADAM NAGOURNEY July 15, 2012 NY Times "BEVERLY HILLS, Calif. — The Subway to the Sea, a train that would tunnel more than 15 miles from downtown Los Angeles to the Pacific Ocean, has encountered no shortage of obstacles over the years: from how to pay for it to skepticism about a huge mass transit project in a region that once ripped out trolley car tracks to make way for automobiles. Now, a new impediment has stepped onto the tracks: Beverly Hills High School. Beverly Hills has gone to court to block the proposed subway line from burrowing under a high school celebrated for its roster of famous graduates and its ZIP code. Beverly Hills contends that the tunnel poses a safety threat to students — the high school is built on a still-active oil field and is near an earthquake fault — and would interfere with the school district’s $3 million plan to renovate the campus..." http://www.nytimes.com/2012/07/16/us...roadblock.html |
San Fernando Valley commuters flock to new Expo Line (LA Daily News)
San Fernando Valley commuters flock to new Expo Line
By Dakota Smith 07/15/2012 Los Angeles Daily News "The dozen riders aboard the Expo Line train car early Wednesday morning used the quiet morning commute in different ways: fiddling with phones, playing video games, or reading a book. All were strangers, but a handful on the train were neighbors, of sorts. North Hollywood resident Dairenn Lombard sat near the window, headed to a job as a computer network engineer near Culver City. A few seats away was Sherman Oaks resident Carlos Mora, who works as an academic review counselor at USC. And farther down the car, Andre Fields was heading to teach kids at a summer camp in Westchester after leaving his home in Chatsworth earlier in the morning. Turns out, San Fernando Valley commuters are flocking to the new Expo Line..." http://www.dailynews.com/news/ci_210...-new-expo-line |
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