Don’t Panic About Trump’s Iran Strategy Just yet
If You Missed Last Night's NBA Finals Game, You Missed Absolute Cinema
The Truth Is Simple: Democrats Don’t Care About Anything but Gaining Power
Here Is Leftist Government
The 60 Minutes Controversy
The War No One Else Is Fighting
Trump Goes to the NBA Finals — Look Who Attacked Him
Who'll Stop the Fraud?
A Villainous Blueprint for Managed Poverty
Donald Trump Is Personally Making Antitrust Sane Again
When Abortion Has a Face
Washington's Debt Problem Is Every Investor's Problem
The GOP's Quiet Rebellion: What It Means for Trump, Congress and the Supreme...
Nine Convicted in Ohio Drug Ring That Mixed Fentanyl Trafficking With $4.5M COVID-19...
Democrat Calls Republicans Fascists, Wishes He Could 'Run Over' Trump at Congressional Bas...
Tipsheet

California Willingly Speeding Toward Bankruptcy

California Willingly Speeding Toward Bankruptcy

Like a frog being slowly boiled in a pot, California just doesn't seem to get it. The state is broke. Governor Jerry Brown is asking for a tax hike to close a $16 billion budget gap and yet, liberal legislators just approved the most expensive project in its history.

Advertisement

Capping a dramatic showdown over the most expensive project in state history, California legislators Friday gave final approval to high-speed rail, firing the nation's first bullet train toward the future after an impassioned debate over whether the project's price tag was too high in a state whose economy is still hobbling.

The Democrat-controlled Senate passed the first $8 billion leg of the $69 billion project -- fittingly, by a single vote. Following the Assembly's approval on Thursday, there is little left to stop the state from breaking ground early next year on Gov. Jerry Brown's plan that voters approved four years ago.

The Los Angeles metro system alone has been a wasteful failure since the beginning and now the state has approved a system that most people won't use at a very expensive cost.

Los Angeles County's Metropolitan Transportation Authority is drawing up a new code of conduct for its board members, following repeated scandals over cost overruns, engineering failures, and favoritism in awarding consultant contracts. The code was demanded by U.S. Transportation Secretary Federico Peña as a prerequisite for any additional federal funds for extension of the Red Line subway

According to MTA ethics officer William C. Lowe, who helped draft the code, "It's like sending [MTA Board Members] all back to catechism class. We're saying 'This is wrong and this is right..' It's everything you're supposed to learn in kindergarten but they were absent that day."

MTA rail extension plans were already under siege by critics of repeated obvious flaws in engineering and system design five years ago.

Advertisement

Related:

CALIFORNIA

Keep working America! California is depending on you!

Join the conversation as a VIP Member

Recommended

Trending on Townhall Videos

Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement